Road legislation takes too great a toll
By TRIP POLLARD
Published: Tuesday, 04/17/07
Tennessee Voices
Transportation funding bills pending in the General Assembly could have
long-lasting, negative impacts on Tennessee's taxpayers, drivers, communities
and the environment.
Some of these bills would allow the state to impose tolls, while others would
allow private companies to build and operate transportation projects and charge
tolls to recover their investment and earn profits. While tolls and
public-private partnerships could have their place, the bills, as written, raise
serious concerns and should not be passed.
As Tennessee's transportation commissioner, Gerald Nicely, and Rep. Phillip
Pinion have correctly pointed out, the state's transportation needs are growing.
But instead of rushing to adopt these complex, controversial bills, we should
make existing roads more efficient, reduce transportation costs by dropping
plans to build unnecessary and destructive projects and take other steps to
address our transportation needs.
Tennessee has not tolled roads in decades and repealed its statute authorizing
tolls in 2002. Current bills revive the option of tolls on publicly owned roads
and open the door to agreements with private companies to operate toll roads.
These bills need to address numerous pitfalls before being passed.
Among other things, there should be public participation, environmental
protections and consistency with transportation plans. No toll project should be
undertaken until all other alternatives are considered and economic, community,
and environmental impacts evaluated.
The full costs to taxpayers must be considered as well, including costs to
improve adjacent roads when trucks and other vehicles inevitably seek to avoid
tolls. Moreover, tolls might never go away unless language in the bills is
tightened on how toll revenue can be used.
A further problem is that these bills would permit private control and operation
of toll roads. A private company's primary purpose is to make as much money as
possible, which clearly can run counter to what is best for the public. The
bills should be limited to publicly controlled toll roads at this time.
The bills to create a Public-Private Transportation Act (PPTA) have even greater
problems. The Southern Environmental Law Center found many flaws with the
Virginia statute these bills closely resemble. Experience with PPTA projects in
other states has also raised serious doubts about how effectively they serve the
public interest. Among other things, this approach has:
• Often attracted little private capital.
• Circumvented normal planning processes and undermined environmental review.
• Primarily led to sprawl-inducing road projects.
• Sparked public complaints about high tolls, sweetheart deals with private
companies and use of eminent domain to take private property for projects
primarily benefiting corporations.
• Limited public participation and release of information about deals.
• Prompted companies to seek "no-compete" clauses to protect profits by
preventing repair or construction of adjacent roads by the state or localities.
• Understated potential costs for taxpayers (such as potential liability for
maintenance and costs to improve adjacent roads when vehicles avoid the tolled
road).
We should explore innovative options to meet Tennessee's transportation needs.
With significant amendments, the current toll bills could help finance needed
projects. The bills for a Public-Private Transportation Act demand much more
public debate and scrutiny and should at least be tabled for this year and
studied further.
Help put the brakes on these bills; contact your legislator today to voice your
concerns.
Published: Tuesday, 04/17/07