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Old Tiger
09-04-2007, 05:03 PM
Secret TexDOT Plan to Toll Existing Interstates
Published on Friday, August 31, 2007.

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Source: 1200 WOIA - Jim Forsyth

At the same time local officials assure us that tolls will 'never' be charged for traveling on existing highway lanes, 1200 WOAI news has obtained a Texas Transportation Commission report in which Tex-DOT officials discuss ways to impose tolls on existing interstate highways.

The report, entitled 'Forward Momentum, a Report to the 110th Congress,' makes several recommendations to Congress on how best to upgrade the state's highway system.
One section, entitled "Tolling Authority EXPANSION" (the capital letters are included in the report), discusses strategies Congress could use to allow Texas to charge tolls on existing Interstate highways, including Interstates 10, 35, and 27.

"Federal law generally prohibits imposing tolls on interstate highways for which federal funds have been used," the report reads on page 11. "In several situations, however, Congress has enacted specific legislation to allow states to 'buy back,' or re-imburse the federal government, for federal funds applies to a highway segment, thereby relieving it of the prohibition against tolls."

That's right. Your state tax money would be used to 'buy back' highways your federal tax money has already paid for, so the state could charge you tolls to drive on that highway.

Chris Lippincott of TexDOT confirms the language in the report, but stresses that any tolling would not be done without the consent of local officials and the public.

"Even if the Congress allowed states to purchase back parts of the interstate, state law would still be in effect, and it would require TexDOT to seek the approval of not only a county's Commissioners Court, but also the voters in that county, before we tolled existing lanes," Lippincott said.

So we've gone from 'existing lanes will never be tolled,' to 'existing lanes might be tolled with your consent.'

The TexDOT report proposes that 'restrictions on tolling programs' be removed, to 'give states such as Texas, as many opportunities as possible for new funding alternatives.'

The report suggests that if Congress 'authorizes states to implement interstate tolling options beyond current pilot programs' it would 'allow revenues from toll-financed facilities to be used for other critical system needs.'

"I'm not a political guru, but I would suggest to you that the likelihood of an existing lane being turned into a toll lane is pretty slim," Lippencott said.

The TexDOT also brags that the Government Accountability Office has 'cited Texas (and Governor Perry specifically) as a leader in using tolls to "reduce congestion")' Texans are being told that tolls would be collected to build badly needed highways, not to 'reduce congestion.'

crzyjournalist03
09-04-2007, 05:14 PM
that's just dumb. construction takes decades, not years...I35 has been under construction just south of Dallas since I was born. As if it doesn't already take long enough to get south since there's only a couple of highways out of Dallas (35 and 45), now they'll charge you to use them.

Bull19
09-04-2007, 05:16 PM
farm roads it is then;)

rockdale80
09-04-2007, 05:23 PM
fan freakin-tastic.

sinton66
09-04-2007, 06:00 PM
Most state legislators who have been interviewed on this issue have stated there is no way it will pass. The taxpayers have already paid to build these roads, no way the legislature will go for this. If they do, they need to be run out on a rail.