ROAD CONSTRUCTION: State DOTs have favored expansion over repair

March 13, 2014

As winter weather takes a brutal toll on roads across the country, drivers are not the only ones facing a bumpy ride from potholes and rough roads: State departments of transportation (DOTs) could feel a painful shock to their long-term finances unless state decision-makers re-examine spending priorities.

As winter weather takes a brutal toll on roads across the country, drivers are not the only ones facing a bumpy ride from potholes and rough roads: State departments of transportation (DOTs) could feel a painful shock to their long-term finances unless state decision-makers re-examine spending priorities.

Repair Priorities 2014, a new report from Smart Growth America and Taxpayers for Common Sense, looks at road conditions in all 50 states and the District of Columbia, as well as how state DOTs are investing in road repair versus expansion. Investing in repair, the report explains, can improve road conditions for drivers and the financial outlook of DOTs at the same time.

Between 2009 and 2011, states spent $20.4 billion each year on road expansion. During that same period, states spent $16.5 billion on road repair—not enough to keep road conditions from declining. From 2008 to 2011, the amount of roads in good condition decreased from 41% to 37%, while the number in poor condition increased from 17% to 21%. 

“Like it or not, states and the federal government remain in an era of budget belt-tightening and policymakers need to make limited funding go further and get the most out of the investments they’ve already made. Road repair does that,” said Steve Ellis of Taxpayers for Common Sense. “This report makes it clear that prioritizing road repair over new construction reduces future fiscal liabilities and safeguards the tremendous investment that federal taxpayers have already made in the nation’s road network.” 

States would need to spend a whopping $45.2 billion per year—three times what they currently spend—to bring roads in poor condition into a state of good repair and keep them that way. If states had spent $20.4 billion each year since 2009 on repair instead of expansion, they would have been on track to have no roads in poor condition by 2014.

“States can make roads better for drivers and improve their own long-term finances by investing in the repair of existing roads instead of building new ones,” said Roger Millar, vice president of Smart Growth America. “This is a matter of spending tax dollars to preserve public assets and give motorists a better ride. Targeted expansion projects should be carefully vetted and demonstrate an essential need for a community before they move forward. These strategies can improve road conditions for drivers and the financial outlook of America’s DOTs at the same time.”

In addition to state-by-state information the new report also recommends ways for state officials to increase the portion of funds going toward repair, including raising the public profile of repair projects, using asset-management practices, focusing repair investments on the most heavily used roads, setting aggressive targets for pavement conditions, and using cost-benefit analysis to prioritize road investments.

Download the full report at http://www.smartgrowthamerica.org/repair-priorities.

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