Keyword: fueltax

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  • Moderate voice needed to steer highway system

    01/03/2008 5:10:53 PM PST · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 6 replies · 132+ views
    Austin American-Statesman ^ | January 3, 2008 | Editorial Board
    2007 ended on a sad note for the family and friends of Ric Williamson, the chairman of the Texas Transportation Commission who died Sunday after a heart attack. Given his aggressive and often controversial role in reshaping Texas highway construction, his death leaves the state and Gov. Rick Perry with an important question about how to move forward after Williamson’s memorial service today. Williamson, 55, a successful business owner and former state representative from Weatherford, was appointed to the transportation commission in 2001 by his good friend Perry and was named chairman in 2004. He became a passionate advocate of...
  • Shift may loom in toll road debate

    01/01/2008 6:08:01 AM PST · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 17 replies · 171+ views
    Dallas Morning News ^ | January 1, 2008 | Michael A. Lindenberger
    Push for higher gas tax could follow chief's death The death of Ric Williamson, the fiery, whip-smart chairman of the state transportation commission, could upend the still-roiling debate over toll roads in Texas in the new year. Mr. Williamson died Saturday of a heart attack at age 55, sending shock waves through the nearly 15,000-employee department he led as well as the political and policy circles where his combative style and pro-toll-road agenda had engendered enormous change – and criticism. Always careful to credit Gov. Rick Perry, a close friend and former roommate, Mr. Williamson emerged as a lightning rod...
  • Texas Highway Funding

    12/25/2007 8:57:43 PM PST · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 16 replies · 794+ views
    Associated Construction Publications ^ | December 24, 2007 | Texas Contractor
    From the Texas Contractor Austin Bureau January 7, 2008 Texas Contractor Interview with Amadeo Saenz on TxDOT construction and maintenance spending in 2008 and beyond. Amadeo Saenz, P.E., a transportation engineer with 29 years' state experience, took over as the executive director of the Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT) at the end of September — and began working to find ways to allow the agency to meet the state's highway needs despite increasing demand,rising costs and decreasing resources. Saenz, 51, was named to Texas' top transportation position by the Texas Transportation Commission in late September to replace Michael Behrens, who...
  • Toll road critics denied access to all requested documents

    12/22/2007 3:42:28 PM PST · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 15 replies · 162+ views
    Houston Chronicle ^ | December 21, 2007 | Associated Press
    AUSTIN — Toll road critics were turned down in their request for wide-ranging transportation department documents, but a judge gave them more time to narrow their request as part of a lawsuit against the state. Texans Uniting for Reform and Freedom, led by San Antonio resident Terri Hall, sued the Texas Department of Transportation in September to fight the department's toll road efforts. The group claims the "Keep Texas Moving" promotional campaign violates a ban on state officials using their authority for political purposes. It also wants to stop agency officials from lobbying Congress to allow more tolling. On Thursday,...
  • Airports land $26 million

    12/20/2007 4:11:40 PM PST · by george76 · 3 replies · 24+ views
    The Denver Post ^ | 12/20/2007 | Jeffrey Leib
    State officials: Extra money wasn't properly tagged as aviation fuel tax. Christmas came early for Colorado's airports as state officials said Wednesday they have identified an extra $26.7 million in aviation fuel sales-tax receipts collected since 2004 that should be reimbursed to airports. An internal audit at the Colorado Department of Revenue found fuel-tax collections totaling $22.8 million for 2004 through 2007 and another $3.9 million in the current fiscal year, which began July 1. Instead of being segregated as aviation fuel taxes, the Revenue Department booked the money as general sales taxes. State aviation fuel-tax proceeds should be remitted...
  • Honolulu's Future Is Too Serious A Matter To Be Left To Transportation 'Experts'

    12/17/2007 11:09:16 AM PST · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 18 replies · 166+ views
    Hawaii Reporter ^ | December 16, 2007 | Daniel P. de Gracia II
    French Prime Minister Georges Clemenceau is credited with the famous remark, "La guerre! C'est une chose trop grave pour la confier ŕ des militaries" -- war is too serious a matter to be entrusted to the military. The idea that Clemenceau was trying to project through these words is that experts are often incapable of seeing beyond their profession and understanding the greater domains of necessity. Here in Hawaii, we are facing a transportation infrastructure crisis of the highest degree of peril. I assert to every single man, woman, and child of these Hawaiian Islands that our future is too...
  • TxDOT cash crunch waylays Austin projects

    12/08/2007 1:42:01 PM PST · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 7 replies · 271+ views
    Austin American-Statesman ^ | December 8, 2007 | Ben Wear
    Local toll authority likely to carry more of the burden for designing, building second wave of Austin-area toll roads The Texas Department of Transportation after February will cease awarding contracts for new or expanded roads, a belt-tightening that probably will indefinitely delay a number of Central Texas highway projects. Work on some local projects, such as widening FM 1460 between Round Rock and Georgetown, RM 2338 in Williamson County, and Texas 195, which runs from Interstate 35 in Williamson County to Killeen, will be shelved for now. In addition, the edict will force Central Texas' local toll authority to carry...
  • Editorial: Toll-road shakedown

    12/07/2007 4:56:15 PM PST · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 23 replies · 101+ views
    Waco Tribune-Herald ^ | December 7, 2007 | Waco Tribune-Herald
    Anyone whose feet are set in concrete against toll roads is going to get run over. Toll roads are here. They are coming. The need is undeniable, as is the rationale in many cases. But you can’t defend toll roads in every instance, and the proposed I-35 toll lanes through Waco sound indefensible. Two concerns present themselves immediately — one about Waco’s self-interest and one about fairness to motorists. First, the provincial concern: The proposed self-contained toll lanes would deliver a lot of travelers through Waco without access and egress to take advantage of what the city offers, even if...
  • Lawmakers to study transportation department's advertising

    12/03/2007 4:15:46 AM PST · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 10 replies · 115+ views
    KRISTV.com ^ | December 3, 2007 | Associated Press
    AUSTIN -- House Speaker Tom Craddick has asked lawmakers to review the Texas Department of Transportation's multimillion-dollar ad campaign promoting toll roads and the Trans-Texas Corridor. Craddick, R-Midland, included a review of the Keep Texas Moving campaign on a list of topics that the House State Affairs Committee will study leading up to the 2009 legislative session. Craddick also asked the Appropriations Committee to review transportation spending over the past five years and study alternatives for funding future transportation needs. The transportation matters were among the "interim charges" that Craddick assigned last week. Other matters to be reviewed in advance...
  • TxDOT aims to tighten purse strings

    11/17/2007 1:56:09 PM PST · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 15 replies · 251+ views
    Houston Chronicle ^ | November 17, 2007 | Peggy Fikac
    Deficit may top $1.8 billion by fiscal 2012 with current slate of road projects AUSTIN — The Texas Department of Transportation, working to fend off a funding shortfall, intends to cut hundreds of millions of dollars budgeted for everything from consulting engineers to right-of-way purchases. The plan wouldn't affect existing road projects, and it's "difficult to say" what future projects would be delayed as a result, agency spokesman Randall Dillard said Friday. Projections show that if existing plans on awarding contracts and expenditures were to go forward, the department would have at least a $1.8 billion deficit by fiscal year...
  • TxDOT reviews initial Trans-Texas Corridor study

    11/16/2007 2:09:45 PM PST · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 5 replies · 288+ views
    Huntsville Item ^ | November 16, 2007 | Robbie Byrd
    The much touted — and disputed — Trans-Texas Corridor may be one step away from a pipe dream and one step closer to a reality. The group this week released its Tier 1 Environmental Impact study, a look at how building the highway, dubbed I-69, running from Texarkana to Laredo, would affect the 50 or so counties it would run through. Bryan Wood, district engineer for the Texas Department of Transportation in Bryan, said the first study only looks at how the many initially proposed component of the highway would impact the surrounding areas. “We’re still a long ways away...
  • Texas: Speed Limit May be Lowered to Boost Toll Revenue

    10/20/2007 3:23:51 PM PDT · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 32 replies · 360+ views
    theNewspaper.com ^ | October 19, 2007 | theNewspaper.com
    Toll road contract in Texas allows state to lower speed limits on nearby interstate freeway to avoid paying penalties to a private company. The Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT) has agreed to consider lowering the maximum speed limit on a stretch of interstate highway that competes with a planned toll road. Cintra-Zachary, a joint Spanish-US venture, paid TxDOT $1.3 billion for the right to collect tolls on 40-miles of State Highway 130 set for construction beginning in 2009. Although TxDOT suggested that free market competition was part of the goal of using a public-private partnerships to construct and operate roads,...
  • TexDOT: No Money to Build New Highways

    09/28/2007 5:07:02 AM PDT · by ElephantinTexas · 41 replies · 268+ views
    WOAI ^ | 09/28/2007 | Jim Forsyth
    TexDOT: No Money to Build New Hghways Agency blames diversion of state gas tax money, curbs on privately funded toll roads By Jim Forsyth Friday, September 28, 2007 At a time the Texas Department of Transportation is defending spending thousands of dollars on a public relations campaign designed to convince you to support toll roads, the department says it has no money to pay for highway construction, 1200 WOAI's Robert Wood reports. "The bottom line is, we're running out of money very quickly," TexDOT's Chris Lippincott says. Lippincott blames decisions by state lawmakers to spend more than $1.5 billion in...
  • Castillo: Choosing sides in the toll road debate could leave an aftertaste

    09/27/2007 11:25:59 PM PDT · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 12 replies · 133+ views
    San Antonio Express-News ^ | September 26, 2007 | Jaime Castillo
    Monitoring the court fight between activist Terri Hall and the Texas Department of Transportation is a lot like staring at a buffet line full of warmed over hospital cafeteria food. On the one hand, you're hungry and interested in eating. But on the other, you really can't get excited about the choices before you. It's tempting but unpalatable to root for Hall, who has adopted the noble cause of trying to stop TxDOT from spending millions of dollars on a PR blitz to build support for toll roads. Despite Hall's impressive gifts of organizing, public speaking and rabble-rousing, she is...
  • O'Malley looks to gas tax

    09/26/2007 5:31:29 PM PDT · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 12 replies · 191+ views
    Baltimore Sun ^ | September 24, 2007 | Andrew A. Green
    Governor favors linking rate to cost of road work Maryland's gasoline tax would go up in 18 months -- and possibly sooner -- if Gov. Martin O'Malley's plan to add $400 million a year in transportation funding is approved by the General Assembly. Although an immediate increase in the gas tax is not part of the $2 billion revenue plan the Democratic governor has been rolling out over the past week, he said Monday that he will push to tie future increases to the rising cost of road and bridge construction materials. At present rates of inflation, that would average...
  • Judge denies activist's request to stop toll road campaign

    09/25/2007 2:14:40 PM PDT · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 9 replies · 104+ views
    Houston Chronicle ^ | September 25, 2007 | Associated Press
    AUSTIN — A judge has refused a toll road opponent's request to block the Texas Department of Transportation from spending money on a campaign that promotes toll roads and the Trans-Texas Corridor. Terri Hall of the San Antonio Toll Party and Texans Uniting for Reform and Freedom argued the "Keep Texas Moving" campaign violates a prohibition on state officials using their authority for political purposes. On Monday, State District Judge Orlinda Naranjo denied Hall's request for a temporary restraining order. The judge noted another law cited by state lawyers that allows the department to promote the development and use of...
  • Editorial: Campaign for tolls a start, not the end

    09/14/2007 6:13:28 PM PDT · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 7 replies · 353+ views
    San Antonio Express News ^ | September 14, 2007 | San Antonio Express-News
    After conducting business as though it were a private entity rather than a public trust, the Texas Department of Transportation is now trying to turn the tide of public opinion in its favor. The Keep Texas Moving campaign is a $7 million to $9 million effort designed to promote various transportation projects in the state. According to the campaign site, www.keeptexasmoving.com, Texans can learn more about such projects as the vast Trans-Texas Corridor and "its promise for Texas." Unfortunately, TxDOT has a history of not being entirely forthcoming about transportation plans. Last year, agency officials and the road-building consortium Cintra-Zachry...
  • TxDOT under fire

    09/09/2007 5:32:56 PM PDT · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 18 replies · 623+ views
    Waxahachie Daily Light ^ | September 8, 2007 | Joann Livingston
    Transportation was a hot subject during the recent legislative session - and it continues to be so in the interim. This week, several Texas lawmakers, Bexar County Commissioner Tommy Adkisson and state Reps. Joe Farias, David Leibowitz, Nathan Macias and others held a press conference in San Antonio in protest against current transportation policy and the Texas Department of Transportation. Key among their concerns are recent reports the state agency has launched a public relations plan to promote the Trans-Texas Corridor and to lobby for toll roads. Texans Uniting for Reform and Freedom founder Terri Hall is among those criticizing...
  • Help wanted: Sound transportation policy

    08/29/2007 7:17:39 PM PDT · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 25 replies · 311+ views
    East Texas Review ^ | August 29, 2007 | William Lutz
    The Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT) says it needs to spend $9 million in taxpayer money to sell its vision of transportation policy to the public. Maybe if TxDOT pursued rational transportation policies, the public support would follow, and it could spend that $9 million building and maintaining roads. Here’s why Texans ought to be concerned. Borrowing carries a price tag. The Texas Constitution has traditionally eschewed deficit spending and required existing revenue to pay for existing spending. Now, the state wants to build most of its roads by borrowing, either publicly or by getting a private firm to agree...
  • Some Needed Attention: If ad fight keeps roads in the news, we're for it

    08/29/2007 5:20:44 PM PDT · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 15 replies · 474+ views
    Dallas Morning News ^ | August 29, 2007 | Dallas Morning News
    Let the fracas continue over Texas transportation policy. It's important to keep people alert to the Legislature's failure to address the state's glaring highway needs, and a new dustup is one way to accomplish that. The latest is over the Department of Transportation's developing "outreach" campaign to advocate for the controversial Trans-Texas Corridor and other proposed toll projects. The price tag could reach $9 million, and some lawmakers have badmouthed the idea. Good. Along with their complaints, maybe we'll see a rare thing come out of the Capitol – realistic solutions for meeting demand for new roadways in the face...
  • Our tax dollars are paying for what?

    08/26/2007 5:50:44 PM PDT · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 4 replies · 532+ views
    Waxahachie Daily Light ^ | August 25, 2007 | Paul D. Perry
    Talk about grist for my mill or even fodder for my cannon: Ready, aim, guess what? Everyone’s favorite “underfunded” state agency, the Texas Department of Transportation, intends to spend $9 million in multimedia advertising promoting toll roads and the unpopular Trans-Texas Corridor. The department is seeking to sway public opinion on a political issue using your tax dollars. Let me re-emphasize: That’s $9 million of taxpayers’ money to tell you that you need to not only pay a gasoline tax but also pay tolls on taxpayer-funded construction. In effect, you are now paying taxes to be propagandized by a state...
  • Highway Robbery of Texas Roads (SPP & Trans-Texas Corridor)

    08/21/2007 9:42:11 PM PDT · by anymouse · 29 replies · 851+ views
    Texas Eagle Forum ^ | 08-20-07 | Cathie Adams
    Texas drivers are tired of traffic gridlock. We want new roads built sooner rather than later, but we do not want a Trans-Texas Corridor that would surely invite more illegal drugs and more illegal aliens. Legislators have gotten our message but since both highway funds, the State Highway Fund (a gasoline tax) and the Texas Mobility Fund (bond money), have been pilfered for other uses, there is no money for road building. Members of the Texas Senate Transportation & Homeland Security Committee met on August 7 to discuss this funding dilemma. Committee Chairman John Carona suggested a new constitutional amendment...
  • Eltife Speaks At Chamber Board Meeting

    08/15/2007 3:20:35 PM PDT · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 10 replies · 265+ views
    Tyler Morning Telegraph ^ | August 15, 2007 | Greg Junek
    Toll roads will not solve Texas' roadway woes, state Sen. Kevin Eltife, R-Tyler, told the Tyler Area Chamber of Commerce board of directors on Tuesday. The state must take care of its infrastructure needs, and Eltife said he has always supported indexing the gasoline tax to inflation to ensure funding to handle those needs. "I think we need to get back to the basics in this state and pay for road and bridge improvements," he said. "We ought to index the gas tax to inflation, we should build our own roads," Eltife said. "The toll roads are a piece of...
  • Hutchison: Stay off road to higher gas tax

    08/11/2007 4:30:57 PM PDT · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 14 replies · 568+ views
    Dallas Morning News ^ | August 10, 2007 | Michael A. Lindenberger
    Democratic calls for raising the federal gas tax to pay for national bridge repairs are wrongheaded, U.S. Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison said Thursday at a transportation forum in Irving. "We cannot adopt every bridge in America," said Ms. Hutchison, R-Texas. "We have to be very, very careful that the federal government not become the genesis [of the funding] for all of the nation's bridges and for all of its highways." Transportation officials in Austin and Washington have warned that the gas tax revenues supporting the Federal Highway Trust Fund will have a $4 billion deficit by 2009 unless new sources...
  • How to Keep Our Bridges Safe

    08/04/2007 8:28:38 PM PDT · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 33 replies · 913+ views
    Wall Street Journal ^ | August 4, 2007 | STEVEN MALANGA
    Nearly a fifth of America's roads are now considered in poor shape and about one-in-four bridges is rated "structurally deficient." The U.S. Department of Transportation estimates that the cost to fix these problems is a staggering $460 billion. The tab grows far larger when you add in the hundreds of billions to build the new transportation infrastructure that's needed to handle the country's growth. Part of the problem is that big increases in state and local spending for politically popular programs, especially Medicaid and education, as well costly public employee pensions and benefits, have crowded out infrastructure -- even as...
  • Perry kills bills on property rights, Trans-Texas Corridor

    06/16/2007 1:28:22 PM PDT · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 18 replies · 866+ views
    Dallas Morning News ^ | June 16, 2007 | Christy Hoppe
    AUSTIN – A property rights bill that went awry and a mandate for the Trans-Texas Corridor to follow the state's existing highway system were among the 49 bills that fell victim to Gov. Rick Perry's veto pen on Friday. Mr. Perry targeted at least two bills that he believed would open the courthouse doors to more litigation, including a bill that would have provided a greater balance in eminent domain proceedings. The bill spelled out what public land uses were acceptable in order to take private land and provided more recourse for land owners. But a provision tacked onto the...
  • Commission authorizes more than 80 toll road projects

    06/14/2007 5:38:29 PM PDT · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 19 replies · 415+ views
    Houston Chronicle ^ | June 14, 2007 | Jim Vertuno (Associated Press)
    AUSTIN — Transportation officials on Thursday approved more than 80 toll road projects across the state, many of which probably would use some private financing. State lawmakers recently passed a two-year moratorium on some private toll road contracts. The law still allows local and state planners to move on the new toll projects — with a price range of more than $50 billion — although the rules have changed. Under these projects, local officials would get the first crack at development before the state steps in. And even if privately financed, the government would own and operate the roads and...
  • Perry signs compromise bill slowing toll road projects

    06/12/2007 8:11:42 AM PDT · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 13 replies · 518+ views
    Houston Chronicle ^ | June 12, 2007 | R. G. Ratcliffe
    But compromise doesn't affect six projects slated for Harris County AUSTIN — Gov. Rick Perry on Monday signed legislation that slows down his ambitious plans for building toll roads but does not halt them completely. Perry and the Legislature got into a stare-down last month when lawmakers sent him a bill that put serious restrictions on building toll roads in Texas and constrained policy set by the Texas Transportation Commission, which is run by the governor's appointees. Perry said he would veto the bill and threatened to call a special legislative session if lawmakers did not send him compromise legislation....
  • Who's to blame for the sellout? Foreign firms buying up America's infrastructure

    06/02/2007 12:08:00 AM PDT · by JohnHuang2 · 45 replies · 1,475+ views
    WorldNetDaily.com ^ | 6/2/07 | Henry Lamb
    The nation's transportation experts have identified their top three priorities: a national freight network, urban congestion and connecting new urban centers with the interstate system. The American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials, meeting in national conference last month, heard futurists predict that the cost of meeting the transportation needs would be $3.1 trillion over the next 25 years. State and local governments are turning to "public-private partnerships," or PPPs, to produce the funding. The city of Chicago was happy to partner with a Spanish-Australian group that paid $1.83 billion for a 99-year lease to operate the Chicago Skyway....
  • Editorial: Yellow on toll roads

    05/27/2007 10:41:29 AM PDT · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 15 replies · 682+ views
    Waco Tribune-Herald ^ | May 27, 2007 | Waco Tribune-Herald
    If anything has approximated unanimity in the 80th Texas Legislature, it is the desire to slow down on toll roads. This has left the state’s biggest proponent of toll roads, Gov. Rick Perry, the odd man out. But he’s still the man with the veto pen. The House and Senate last week overwhelmingly approved a two-year moratorium on most toll roads, including the Trans-Texas Corridor. Lawmakers earlier sent a bill to Perry with toll-road restrictions. He vetoed it, and threatened a special session if he didn’t get a bill he could sign. The bill that emerged reportedly meets his terms....
  • Toll road foe a powerful force

    05/20/2007 3:00:16 PM PDT · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 7 replies · 768+ views
    San Antonio Express-News ^ | May 19, 2007 | Patrick Driscoll
    In many ways, Terri Hall was on a collision course with Texas toll road policies long before she and her family loaded up their van and drove from California to the Hill Country three years ago. A lifetime of volunteering, a hunger for staying on top of politics, and strong religious and moral convictions helped hone Hall's activist instincts. Her brains, drive, superb speaking skills, engaging personality and wholesome good looks — noted by friends and enemies alike — make Hall especially effective. They help explain why this 37-year-old mother of six is a leading force in a populist assault...
  • State Motor Fuel Excise Tax Rates

    05/17/2007 3:41:49 PM PDT · by Kimmers · 25 replies · 1,071+ views
    State Motor Fuel Excise Tax Rates In addition to income, severance, production, property, and other taxes, the products produced by the petroleum industry are subject to various excise taxes. Every state imposes an excise tax on motor fuel. Often excise tax rates within a state differ depending on the type of motor fuel being purchased--for example, gasoline may be subject to one rate while diesel is subject to a different rate. Determining the amount of tax paid on one gallon of gasoline or diesel fuel purchased by a consumer at the pump can involve numerous factors and calculations. The tax...
  • New tollway bill passes Senate

    05/15/2007 9:51:54 AM PDT · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 9 replies · 697+ views
    Austin American-Statesman ^ | May 15, 2007 | Bean Wear
    More projects exempted from private toll road moratorium in unanimous Senate vote. The Texas Senate, after hours of closed-door negotiations stamped out hot spots of dissent, unanimously passed revamped toll road legislation Monday that would supplant a bill languishing on Gov. Rick Perry's desk. Perry, who has made it clear he would veto the first bill, House Bill 1892, immediately signaled that he would allow Senate Bill 792 to become law if the House passes it in its current form. Lawmakers involved in the negotiations say they hope to get SB 792 to Perry late this week in time to...
  • Fight on! (Texas transportation battle)

    05/14/2007 8:53:10 AM PDT · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 6 replies · 466+ views
    Fort Worth Star-Telegram ^ | May 14, 2007 | Fort Worth Star-Telegram
    Our colleagues at The Dallas Morning News offered this advice to lawmakers fighting to keep intact complex regional plans to deal with transportation issues in Dallas, Fort Worth and the surrounding counties: "Keep Up the Fight." Good advice. Both the Dallas paper and the Star-Telegram have felt some ownership of this issue since we combined on a joint editorial project in 2003, calling for a regionwide effort to link area cities by rail. But rail is only part of the solution to the serious problem of traffic congestion that is approaching gridlock during parts of the day. Officials in North...
  • Farm Bureau urges governor support of TTC Funding Moratorium

    05/07/2007 6:06:05 PM PDT · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 7 replies · 302+ views
    Southwest Farm Press ^ | May 7, 2007 | Southwest Farm Press
    Waco - Governor Rick Perry should sign a bill that would establish a two-year moratorium on the controversial Trans Texas Corridor (TTC), according to the board of directors of the state's largest farm organization. A letter requesting the governor's approval of House Bill 1892, signed by the 14 members of the Texas Farm Bureau board, including TFB President Kenneth Dierschke, urges a moratorium on the use of private equity comprehensive development agreements, including the TTC. The letter was delivered to Governor Perry today. It said in part, "We believe the moratorium envisioned in HB 1892 will give all Texans the...
  • Bumpy ride for tollway plans

    04/28/2007 1:54:03 PM PDT · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 17 replies · 552+ views
    Fort Worth Star-Telegram ^ | April 28, 2007 | Aman Batheja
    AUSTIN -- The Texas Senate passed its second bill this session creating a two-year moratorium on privately funded toll roads Friday, a sharp rebuke of Gov. Rick Perry's plan to solve the state's transportation problems. Senators voted 27-4 to approve the bill, which would prevent the creation of toll roads made by public entities contracting with private companies. The Senate passed a similar bill earlier, but that version appears dead in the House. The version approved Friday easily passed the House this month by a vote of 137-2. The bill's Senate sponsor, Republican Tommy Williams of The Woodlands, said he...
  • Commentary: Toll road deals merit scrutiny

    04/22/2007 12:14:18 PM PDT · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 16 replies · 596+ views
    San Antonio Express-News ^ | April 22, 2007 | Terri Hall
    Wonder why there is all the fuss over toll roads? Well, we're not talking about traditional toll projects. Gov. Rick Perry and his Transportation Commission are pushing private toll road deals that limit free routes and allow the private operator to charge high tolls. As ex-Transportation Commissioner Sen. Robert Nichols, a stickler for details and the author of a bill to halt comprehensive development agreements, or CDAs, has noted, the devil is in the details. These private toll contracts include noncompete agreements like Cintra's. There will be no improvements made to existing roads or new free routes built within a...
  • Senate approves moratorium on private toll roads (updated)

    04/20/2007 2:28:20 PM PDT · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 10 replies · 441+ views
    Houston Chronicle ^ | April 19, 2007 | Liz Austin Peterson (Associated Press)
    AUSTIN — The Texas Senate on Thursday approved a bill placing a two-year moratorium on private toll road contracts and creating a panel to review the terms of those agreements. Gov. Rick Perry had urged the Legislature to reject the freeze. He said the state's current transportation system, which involves public-private partnerships to build toll roads, needs to continue if Texas is to keep attracting big companies and jobs. But growing opposition to Perry's proposed Trans-Texas Corridor — a combined toll road and rail system that would whisk traffic from the Oklahoma line to Mexico — have made some lawmakers...
  • Texas toll road projects under scrutiny

    04/15/2007 10:16:14 AM PDT · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 11 replies · 542+ views
    Amarillo Globe-News ^ | April 15, 2007 | April Castro (Associated Press)
    AUSTIN - A two-year moratorium on private toll roads that won preliminary approval in the House last week would put the brakes on the Trans-Texas Corridor, a superhighway that a private firm received a contract for earlier this year. The moratorium also would halt seven near-term projects in the state, said Rep. Lois Kolkhorst, the Brenham Republican who added the proposal to a House bill. "This is us tapping the brakes, looking before we leap ... into contracts that last 50-plus years," Kolkhorst said. Her proposal would require the state to create a commission to study the effects of private...
  • Moratorium sought (on public-private toll road projects)

    04/12/2007 11:49:37 AM PDT · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 36 replies · 603+ views
    Herald Democrats ^ | April 11, 2007 | Mary Jane Famer
    Proponents and opponents alike of the proposed Trans Texas Corridor might be pleased with a bill amendment that, if it completes the legislative process, will put a two-year moratorium on private-public highway partnerships. Officials in Austin believe it will pass both the Texas House of Representatives and the Texas Senate but are unsure whether Gov. Rick Perry will sign it into law. Senate Bill 1267 and House Bill 1892 impose a two-year moratorium on privately funded toll road projects by barring any new comprehensive development agreements or toll-project sales to a private entity, and requiring a study committee to examine...
  • House proposal would put 2-year moratorium on private toll roads

    04/11/2007 11:30:50 AM PDT · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 18 replies · 710+ views
    Houston Chronicle ^ | April 10, 2007 | April Castro (Associated Press)
    AUSTIN — A two-year moratorium on private toll roads that won preliminary approval in the House on Tuesday would put the brakes on the Trans-Texas Corridor, a superhighway that a private firm received a contract for earlier this year. The moratorium also would halt seven near-term projects in the state, said Rep. Lois Kolkhorst, the Brenham Republican who added the proposal to a House bill. "This is us tapping the brakes, looking before we leap ... into contracts that last 50-plus years," Kolkhorst said. Her proposal would require the state to create a commission to study the effects of private...
  • Editorial: Gutsy hike in gas tax belongs on the table

    04/07/2007 7:00:29 PM PDT · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 32 replies · 908+ views
    San Antonio Express-News ^ | April 7, 2007 | San Antonio Express-News
    The growing traffic congestion in Texas is a multipronged problem that cannot be solved by one policy. At a time when toll roads appear to be state leadership's primary answer to the dilemma, a bill proposed by Sen. John Carona, R-Dallas, has merit. The legislation would index the gas tax to the Highway Cost Index, or the cost of highway construction over time. According to Carona's office, the bill by 2030 would generate about $16 billion in gas tax revenue — or 31/2 times more than the current gas tax would. Not only would more money be available for transportation...
  • Perry Speaks Out Against Moratorium On Private Toll Road Projects

    04/04/2007 2:46:57 PM PDT · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 18 replies · 645+ views
    KWTX ^ | April 3, 2007 | KWTX
    (April 3, 2007)—Gov. Rick Perry spoke out Tuesday against proposed legislation that would put a two-year moratorium on private toll road projects including the Trans-Texas Corridor and urged lawmakers to “ensure vital transportation projects continue as planned.” Several bills are pending in Austin aimed at putting the brakes on the massive highway project. State Representative Lois W. Kolkhorst of Brenham has filed a bill that would kill the project altogether and a second measure that calls for a two-year moratorium on allowing private entities from buying the rights to build and operate toll roads. During a visit with US Transportation...
  • Hacks lie in wait for highway robbery

    04/01/2007 12:56:03 PM PDT · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 10 replies · 805+ views
    Boston Herald ^ | March 30, 2007 | Howie Carr
    Remember the public debate last year over whether the state should raise the gasoline tax or tolls to pay for the rotten roads around here? Well, the debate’s over. There’s been a compromise. We’re going to raise both the tolls and the gasoline tax. Or so says the Mass. Transportation Finance Commission. They haven’t officially come out and said they want higher gas taxes and tolls. First they’re going to have the traditional “public hearings.” Of course it’s all a complete bag job. Just look at the tell-tale phrases in the news stories about the “shocking” conditions of the state’s...
  • Farm Bureau Describes TTC Project As A Disaster For Farms And Ranches

    03/24/2007 11:13:06 AM PDT · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 18 replies · 574+ views
    KWTX ^ | March 23, 2007 | KWTX
    The massive Trans-Texas Corridor project is a disaster for farms and ranches that lie in its proposed path, the Waco-based Texas Farm Bureau says. The Farm Bureau has been steadfast in its opposition to the project and says its encouraged by efforts in Austin to derail or at least delay the $184 billion plan, which ultimately calls for a 4,000-mile network of transportation corridors that would crisscross the state with separate highway lanes for passenger vehicles and trucks, passenger rail, freight rain, commuter rail and dedicated utility zones. ?Our members are overwhelmingly opposed to the Trans Texas Corridor,? says TFB...
  • We need bold highway funding

    03/23/2007 4:34:04 PM PDT · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 25 replies · 564+ views
    Dallas Morning News ^ | March 23, 2007 | Keith Self (Collin County Judge)
    In the political world, rapid change only occurs when the public focuses attention on a specific issue. We have that situation right now in Austin. Public and legislative attention is focused on the Texas Department of Transportation and a proposed moratorium on the Comprehensive Development Agreement process, including the recently announced CDA to construct State Highway 121 in Collin County. This public and legislative attention may offer an opportunity for Texas to reaffirm our commitment to focus government spending on core functions – in this case, transportation. There are many subplots swirling in this complex CDA moratorium issue – reining...
  • March madness over tolls grips Legislature

    03/20/2007 2:26:22 PM PDT · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 14 replies · 409+ views
    Austin American-Statesman ^ | March 19, 2007 | Ben Wear
    Mike Krusee looked tired. The Republican state representative from Williamson County, interviewed at his Capitol office last week, for 10 days or so had been fighting what some people call the creeping crud, a debilitating mixture of cold, flu and allergy symptoms hitting many Central Texans this spring. But Krusee, for much longer than 10 days, has also been fighting the creeping realization among legislators that over the past two sessions, they might have granted Gov. Rick Perry and the Texas Department of Transportation too much power to create toll roads. For the first time in his three sessions as...
  • Texas Toll Road Plan Stirs Grassroots Protest

    03/12/2007 1:48:51 PM PDT · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 50 replies · 1,012+ views
    Human Events ^ | March 12, 2007 | Gary Hoitsma
    The conventional wisdom among conservatives about the benefits of privatizing government programs is being severely tested in a heretofore largely obscure controversy that is now blossoming in America’s heartland. When up to several thousand people gathered in vigorous protest March 2 at the majestic state capitol in Austin, there were echoes of the formative beginnings of similar grassroots protest movements of other eras, in which the organizers were not professional political activists, but rather genuinely fed-up ordinary citizens motivated by a combination of self-interest and patriotism to seek a legitimate redress of grievances. Almost 30 years ago, a similar citizen...
  • Texas toll-road debate still has miles to go

    03/11/2007 6:00:35 PM PDT · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 17 replies · 635+ views
    Dallas Morning News ^ | March 11, 2007 | Tony Hartzel
    AUSTIN – Four years of simmering frustration boiled over at a recent Texas Senate committee hearing with just one thing on the agenda: toll roads. An overflow crowd bashed and booed the Texas Transportation Commission in front of mostly like-minded senators. For eight hours, lawmakers and audience members alike questioned the state's increasing reliance on tolls. "We can't simply build roads at any cost," Sen. John Carona said to cheers. "We've got to build them smarter." Some argue that toll roads are the only smart play in a state where the Legislature has refused to raise the tax on gasoline,...
  • Brake Lights: A traffic jam of opposition is facing the Trans-Texas Corridor.

    03/10/2007 7:58:24 PM PST · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 50 replies · 1,221+ views
    Fort Worth Weekly ^ | March 7, 2007 | Peter Gorman
    The Trans-Texas Corridor, the Goliath of Texas road projects, is taking a real bruising from the slingshot crowd these days, with so many Davids piling up stones that critics and supporters alike are beginning to believe it may be stoppable. In the last few weeks, more than a dozen bills have been introduced in the both the Texas State and House to either stop the project cold or put enough restrictions on it to chill the interest of private investors. In late February, a state audit report revealed that millions of public dollars have secretly been spent on the project...