News
Articles
Case Histories
Buyer's Guide
Career Center
April 2009
Industry Links
May 2009
Asphalt Roads
Bridges
Concrete Roads
Safety
Software
Traffic Management
Click here for a subscription to
Roads & Bridges
Give us your feedback on our site.
Change your subscription info
Subscribe to our
Executive News Summary e-Newsletter.

News this week sponsored by: Autodesk

INDUSTRY NEWS
  RSS: Roads & Bridges News

 Subscribe
Get the latest industry headlines conveniently in our email newsletter! Click here to subscribe.
 
 Share It
"../popup_app/index.cfm?fuseaction=showEmailPageToAFriendForm&appDirectory=rb&linkQueryString=fuseaction=showNewsItem*amp*newsItemId=13180&linkLabel=Tolls%20can%26%23039%3Bt%20meet%20needs%20of%20future%20highway%20funding%20" target="_new">   "../popup_app/index.cfm?fuseaction=showEmailPageToAFriendForm&appDirectory=rb&linkQueryString=fuseaction=showNewsItem*amp*newsItemId=13180&linkLabel=Tolls%20can%26%23039%3Bt%20meet%20needs%20of%20future%20highway%20funding%20" target="_new">Email this page to a friend
 
 More News
  • Overall traffic fatalities reach record low
  • Study: Deficient roadways are a major contributor to highway fatalities
  • NAPA awards Diamond Achievement Commendation to P. Flanigan & Sons
  • While business isn't better, the worsening has slowed
  • APWA recognizes outstanding public works projects across North America
  • Mica slams stimulus progress
  • Subcommittees try to figure out how to fund transportation
  • Congress split on 18-month extension
  • Niagara Falls Bridge Commission launches Twitter traffic updates
  • Surface Transportation Authorization Act moves forward
  • Caltrans chief leaves for more money
  • Move might mean an end to troubled Turnpike
  • Details on Surface Transportation Authorization Act of 2009 finally released
  • ARTBA joins International Bridge Conference as strategic partner
  • Second Highway Trust Fund fix could be on the horizon
  • Guidelines announced for receiving economic recovery funds for high-speed rail
  • Flatiron wins the Associated General Contractors of California Excellence in Safety Award
  • Biden announces $2 billion bond program for Michigan public, private sectors
  • New Caltrans solar projects will help economy and environment
  • TRIP report reveals funding shortfall in New Jersey
  • Results of stimulus slowly trickling in
  • NTPP outlines goals for next transportation bill
  • Porcari helps celebrate stimulus project in Wis.
  • Oberstar will not tolerate funding extensions
  • House funding bill is delayed
  • Funding shortfall could happen by mid-July
  • UC San Diego student wins ITS essay competition
  • Michigan building but also cutting road work
  • Ray LaHood sworn in as U.S. Secretary of Transportation
  • Corps of Engineers finds problems with Charles County highway permit application
  • N.C. highway spending cut by $50 million
  • Transportation secretary announces decreasing revenues in Virginia
  • FHWA warns about the need for new revenue source
  • New York State unveils plan to replace Tappan Zee Bridge
  • Mass. Turnpike Authority may merge with other state agencies
  • Pa. Turnpike responds to FHWA request
  • Illinois lawmakers again debating infrastructure program
  • U.S. Chamber, associations launch "FasterBetterSafer" campaign
  • Report examines worsening travel infrastructure in Massachusets
  • Cat, Navistar join forces
  • Senators announce plan to address HTF shortfall
  • ODOT honored for I-5 environmental work
  • W.Va. still waiting for that boom
  • Transportation receives mixed reviews in Va.
  • Private resistance in Florida
  • Not even close
  • Attorney General demands end to free rides in New York
  • Georgia looking at toll option
  • Private group may run Turnpike
  • VDOT releases emergency response report
  • Debate on FAA reauthorization bill postponed
  • Oberstar presses for I-35W hearing
  • MoDOT engineers find no bridge damages so far after earthquake
  • Pennsylvania readies itself for privatization
  • Vermont agency may have to scale back $5 million
  • Florida may suspend its gas tax
  • AGC protests McCain’s proposed gas tax moratorium
  • Legislators reject one toll bill, accept another
  • Congressman subpoenas EPA for greenhouse gas waiver documents
  • California governor highlights need for trained workforce
  • Construction faces tumultuous year for projects, prices, labor, economist says
  • Consortium achieives financial close on Texas toll road project
  • CONTECH acquires European rights to CDS technology
  • Iowa bridges ranked fourth most deficient in nation
  • Court invalidates Ultimax patents
  • Kentucky governor: State resources not misused in traffic signal approval
  • U.S. Rep. Matheson stresses Utah’s need for road money
  • Capka steps down from FHWA chief post
  • Texas DOT opens new transportation management center
  • Budget office estimates $1.4B shortfall in Highway Trust Fund
  • Big Dig contractors to pay $458.2M
  • Econolite & PTV America integrate transportation technologies

  • All Current News
  • Archived News
  • Tolls can't meet needs of future highway funding

    Recent AASHTO report reveals that tolls cannot meet future highway needs
    March 9, 2007

    State highway officials warned this week of a looming $11 billion hole in federal highway funds and said the growing shift toward tolls and private leases of roads cannot generate enough money to meet the nation's short- or long-term transportation needs, Stateline.org reported.

    Instead, the federal gas tax of 18.4 cents per gal, last raised 14 years ago, would have to go up at least 3 cents by 2009 and 7 cents more by 2015 just to maintain the current highway system and keep pace with the fast-rising cost of roads, according to a new report by the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials (AASHTO).

    One popular solution to road-funding woes involves state and local governments adding toll lanes or leasing toll roads to private companies. In 2005, Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniels signed a $3.85 billion deal to lease the Indiana Toll Road to an international consortium for 75 years. In 2002, Texas Gov. Rick Perry launched a 50-year plan to build 4,000 miles of privately financed toll roads along portions of I-69 and I-35. Pennsylvania and New Jersey also are considering leasing portions of their toll roads to private companies.

    In 2005, tolling earned $7.7 billion, which was 5% of highway revenues nationally, AASHTO reported. Tolling could increase to 9% of highway funds over the next decade, a significant amount but not a "silver bullet" to fix the country's transportation funding problems, said Victor Mendez, director of the Arizona Department of Transportation and AASHTO president.

    Pete Rahn, director of the Missouri Department of Transportation, said states are looking for innovative ways to use the marketplace. "But the reality is, no matter how far we try to stretch these resources, we're not even coming close to dealing with the real needs of the critical roads that are the lifeblood of this country," he said.

    The report is the first of six that AASHTO plans to provide a congressionally chartered panel analyzing the country's future transportation needs, Stateline.org reported. The last similar comprehensive study was issued in 1979 and called for deregulation of the aviation, rail and trucking industries and major investments in transportation.

    The AASHTO report said the capacity of the Interstate highway system will have to double during the next 50 years and the number of people riding public transportation should double within 20 years. Railways must be prepared to handle a 63% increase in freight by 2035, according to the association's estimates.

    The half-century old Interstate system is in danger of being overwhelmed by long-term neglect, a steady increase in the number of drivers, a stagnant source of funding and rampant inflation of road-building costs, according to AASHTO.

    The biggest immediate hurdle to improving roads is that federal gas taxes, which pay for more than 45% of the nation's transportation infrastructure, have not been raised since 1993 and are not even sufficient to cover the spending authorized in the 2005 federal transportation law. Federal gas taxes will fall $11 billion short of planned road projects by 2009, but the gap could be as big as $19 billion the following year.

    U.S. Rep. Jim Oberstar of Minnesota, chairman of the U.S. House Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, said the average individual pays $240 a year for gas taxes, or about 2 cents per mile driven. He told state highway administrators, meeting in Washington, D.C., that political will is needed to raise the gas tax, as three of the last four presidents have done.

    A longer-term problem is that the cost of building and fixing roads has grown rapidly in recent years. Between the last gas-tax hike in 1993 and 2015, construction costs will have increased by more than 70%, report stated.

    Mendez of Arizona said costs in his state have risen 20-30% in the past 18 months because of higher-priced steel, oil for asphalt and fuel for road-building equipment.

    While the U.S. faces financial shortfalls in keeping up its highway system, emerging economies such as China are being bolstered by major transportation initiatives, AASHTO warns. China, with a population of 1.3 billion compared with 301 million in the U.S., is building a 53,000-mile expressway system--6,000 miles more than U.S. interstates--that is slated to be finished in 2020.



    Source: Stateline.org   March 9, 2007



    Advertise with us
    Learn about our online marketing opportunities.
    Home   |   Advertising   |   News Search   |   Articles   |   Buyer's Guide   |   Career Center   |   Case Histories   |   Top of Page