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Scott Walker says he's open to tolling
The Wisconsin State Journal ^ | May 31, 2017 | Mark Sommerhauser

Posted on 06/17/2017 5:01:39 AM PDT by Tolerance Sucks Rocks

BELOIT — Gov. Scott Walker on Tuesday signaled he’s open to charging tolls on Wisconsin’s Interstates, but with a key condition: linking it to a reduction in the state’s 30.9-cent-per-gallon gas tax.

Walker also said an impasse over the state’s next transportation budget risks costly delays to billion-dollar highway projects now under construction. That includes a $1.2 billion expansion of Interstate 39-90 from the Madison area to the Illinois state line.

The Interstate formed the backdrop for Walker’s remarks in a press conference at a Beloit rest stop.

Republicans who control the state Assembly have proposed seeking federal approval to toll Interstates, which they say would help stabilize road and bridge finances in the long term. Interstate tolling would take years and hundreds of millions in upfront costs to implement. The first step would be to seek federal approval, the granting of which is not certain.

State Senate Majority Leader Scott Fitzgerald, R-Juneau, said this month that tolling “is something that needs to be explored.”

Walker said Tuesday that a tolling plan “would be something we’d look at.”

“But it would have to include a reduction in the gas tax for Wisconsin residents,” Walker added. He did not specify how much of a reduction would be necessary.

Assembly Majority Leader Jim Steineke, R-Kaukauna, said Walker’s interest in tying tolling to a gas tax cut might be feasible if the result is a significant net increase in funding for transportation over the long term. Since tolling is a long-term proposition, it would not provide new revenue for the next state budget.

A July 1 deadline looms in budget talks; it’s the start of the state fiscal year and of the next two-year budget cycle.

“The only thing that would endanger the transportation part of the budget from getting done on time is if we don’t have willing partners in negotiation,” Steineke said. “Everyone knows in a negotiation, everyone has to give a little to get a little.”

Delays possible

Legislative Democrats and some Republicans say gas tax increases should be considered for the transportation budget.

The state faces a growing backlog of road and bridge projects, and many in both parties say it cannot continue to rely on borrowing and delaying projects to balance the funding ledger.

So Walker’s call to link tolling to a gas-tax cut may complicate already-fraught budget negotiations.

“It just seems like we’ve taken yet one more option off the table,” said Craig Thompson, director of the state Transportation Development Association, which advocates for more funding for roads, bridges and transit.

Fitzgerald, in a statement from a spokeswoman Tuesday, said he “would like to see tolling remain part of the conversation.”

“He continues to advocate for a legislative transportation solution that Gov. Walker will support,” Fitzgerald spokeswoman Myranda Tanck said.

Some Republican lawmakers have suggested splitting transportation from the larger state budget. Such a move could enable some Democrats to support the transportation measure and could give lawmakers more time to reach an agreement.

But Walker said Tuesday that a budget split would delay work on some highway projects because it likely would mean there would be no new transportation budget in place by July 1.

If only a week or two passes after July 1 before Walker and lawmakers agree on a transportation budget, construction on ongoing major projects likely wouldn’t be affected, Walker said. In addition to the I-39-90 project, the projects include expansions of Verona Road from Raymond Road to McKee Road in the Madison area, of Highway 10/Highway 441 in the Fox Valley and of Highway 15 in Outagamie County.

But under multiple months’ delay, or if no new transportation budget were enacted at all, current funding levels would carry over into the next two-year cycle.

‘Tough decisions’

Under that scenario, Walker predicted all four active major highway projects would be affected. Which ones would be delayed, and by how much, would be decided by the state Department of Transportation, he said.

“Some tough decisions would have to be made by the Department of Transportation,” Walker said. “My message is simple: let’s just get it done.”

Walker has proposed to fund all four ongoing major highway projects in his budget proposal, keeping their construction on track for the next two years. It would come at the expense of large freeway projects in southeast Wisconsin, which would see a 70 percent funding reduction under the governor’s plan.

For months the transportation debate has centered on whether to increase gas taxes or vehicle fees to ease the state’s backlog of road and bridge projects.

Walker opposes the move and proposed a budget that holds the line on taxes and fees. The plan relies on $500 million in borrowing — a problem for some legislative Republicans wary of putting more on the state’s credit card.

He cited a new memo from the nonpartisan Legislative Fiscal Bureau saying the state’s transportation fund, filled mostly by gas taxes and vehicle fees, is expected to end the next budget cycle, from 2017-19, with more than $93 million more than previously projected. That’s due to revised projections of higher gas tax revenues and lower debt service costs, the bureau said.

The I-39-90 project is the costliest of the ongoing major projects. Walker repeatedly has described it as a priority project to move tourist traffic into Wisconsin and for businesses along the corridor, which goes through Beloit, Janesville and Madison.

Not included in the $1.2 billion estimate for the project is the reconstruction of the Madison Beltline interchange with I-39-90, which was part of its original scope. DOT Secretary Dave Ross has said the department’s estimate for that part of the project, $550 million, is “totally unacceptable” and the department will re-evaluate it.Senate Democratic Leader Jennifer Shilling, D-La Crosse, said in a statement that legislative Democrats want a long-term solution to pay for roads.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Constitution/Conservatism; Extended News; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: Connecticut; US: New Jersey; US: Oregon; US: Wisconsin
KEYWORDS: congestionpricing; connecticut; construction; dannelmalloy; democrats; finance; gastax; gop; hartford; infrastructure; masidon; newjersey; oregon; portland; republicans; salem; tolling; tolls; transportation; trump; wisconsin
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To: BobL

“So let’s get past that claim - and try to figure out the best way to operate these highways so that the public DOES NOT get taken to the cleaners”

The best way would be to elect honest men to public office, and to clean the scum out of the bureaucracies.


61 posted on 06/17/2017 12:44:40 PM PDT by dsc (Any attempt to move a government to the left is a crime against humanity.)
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To: Tolerance Sucks Rocks
Tolls on N.J. interstate highways? Trump thinks it's a good idea.
62 posted on 06/17/2017 1:14:10 PM PDT by Tolerance Sucks Rocks (April 2006 Message from Dan http://www.dansimmons.com/news/message/2006_04.htm)
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To: Tolerance Sucks Rocks

He also thinks arming Wahhabis is a good idea. He also thinks extending DACA is a good idea.


63 posted on 06/17/2017 1:35:38 PM PDT by Ray76 (DRAIN THE SWAMP)
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To: Tolerance Sucks Rocks
Gov. Scott Walker on Tuesday signaled he’s open to charging tolls on Wisconsin’s Interstates, but with a key condition: linking it to a reduction in the state’s 30.9-cent-per-gallon gas tax.

Pure B/S. This is the same old Kabuki Treatre of lowering a tax (temporarily) as a sop to instituting an additional one.

64 posted on 06/17/2017 2:21:12 PM PDT by Oatka
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To: dsc

“The best way would be to elect honest men to public office, and to clean the scum out of the bureaucracies.”

In Singapore they do have very honest politicians...not so much here though.


65 posted on 06/17/2017 4:21:21 PM PDT by BobL (In Honor of the NeverTrumpers, I declare myself as FR's first 'Imitation NeverTrumper')
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To: Tolerance Sucks Rocks

It occurs to me that herein lies the answer we have been looking for. Choke the life out of these Rat enclaves by turning all the circumferentials around these havens of insanity into toll roads with STEEP tolls. Like $100 over axle per trip. Put an end to commuters going in or coming out. $100 tax per trip on commuter train. These Rats love taxing the “rich” they will take the bait, hook, line, and sinker.


66 posted on 06/17/2017 5:48:57 PM PDT by wastoute (Government cannot redistribute wealth. Government can only redistribute poverty.)
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To: dsc

“let the free market do its magic - increase quality, lower costs”

How can you say that, when it’s so obvious that the answer to every problem is always raising taxes?


and giving me muh free roads

because welfare for muh roads is good


67 posted on 06/17/2017 9:47:35 PM PDT by vooch (America First)
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To: Tolerance Sucks Rocks

This didn’t mention how much the tolls would be, or which interstates would become tolls. When people are only making $9 or $10 an hour, tolls are a big deal getting to work. State workers in Madison can afford it I guess.


68 posted on 06/18/2017 6:43:36 AM PDT by virgil (The evil that men do lives after them.)
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To: BraveMan

As someone who uses the Marquette every day, I think it was a big improvement when it was redesigned and reconstructed.


69 posted on 06/19/2017 1:37:46 PM PDT by TommyC1 (Truth will set you free.)
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To: TommyC1

As someone who uses the Marquette every day as well, I am happy your experience is an improvement. Mine definitely is not.


70 posted on 06/19/2017 6:17:47 PM PDT by BraveMan
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