Posted on 12/05/2006 9:01:33 AM PST by Tolerance Sucks Rocks
The proposed Trans-Texas Corridor has been touted as a means to ease congestion along Interstate 35 by siphoning off some of the thousands of trucks that use the interstate each day. Unfortunately, proponents of the massive project may have trouble getting some truckers interested in paying a toll to haul their goods across the state.
According to the Texas Department of Transportation, passenger vehicles could pay 15.2 cents per mile and truck drivers 58.5 cents per mile to drive on the 370-mile corridor. The fees were set as part of a master plan for the 1,200-foot-wide tollway, rail and utility corridor developed by international firm Cintra-Zachry. The company is expected to spend $8.8 billion to build the road and pay the state $1.9 billion for the opportunity, according to the plan. The company then would have rights to recoup its expenses and make a profit by charging tolls for 50 years.
But for truck drivers like Joe and Sarah Herschberger, such a toll would add too big a burden to their operating expenses. The husband-and-wife truck-driving team from Pennsylvania, taking a break at a Waco truck stop last week, said they drive across the country on a regular basis and avoid tolls whenever they can.
We dont work for a company, we own our rig, so all our expenses come out of our pockets, Joe said.
We get paid about $1,500 a month, and most of that goes back into the truck in operating expenses, Sarah added. With the cost of gas lately, theres not much left over for us.
Some national trucking companies also say that they dont send their drivers on toll roads and that the Trans-Texas Corridor wont be different.
We are not in favor of a toll road. Thats the way my company feels about it, said Glen Burnett, manager of the Waco service center for the North Carolina-based Old Dominion Freight Line. If (I-35) is still open and free, we are going to send our trucks on it. Why pay a toll when you can go for free?
Concern over tolls
Such sentiments have raised concerns for Waco resident Roy Walthall and other members of the Trans-Texas Corridor Advisory Committee. Walthall said he does not consider charging a toll a good solution to reducing I-35 congestion.
We just keep scratching our heads about it, Walthall said of the advisory committee. How are you going to make a profit if nobody will pay to use the thing? They keep saying we do this all over the world and make millions of dollars, but Im not sure how thats going to work here.
Walthall said one solution might be to move more freight by rail lines proposed as part of the corridor. Another would be to build toll roads only as routes around congested areas such as Austin and the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex.
Ken Roberts, spokesman for the highway departments Waco office, said transportation officials generally agree that not all truckers will pay a toll to drive the corridor.
But if we could get 10 percent to take the Trans-Texas Corridor, we could make a difference, Roberts said. Of the 80,000 vehicles a day on I-35, a third of those are trucks. It could be a significant reduction.
Roberts said some truckers also may avoid the corridor because they need to stop regularly at cities along the interstate as part of their delivery routes. Cross-country truck drivers would benefit more from the planned road, he said.
John Esparza, president and CEO of the Texas Motor Transportation Association, agreed it is not safe to assume trucks will use the corridor in great numbers. But he applauded state officials for trying innovative ways to expand the states roadways.
Its not about the trucks on the tolls but the passenger vehicles on the tolls that will contribute to the ultimate goal of offering a safe, viable alternative to those who are willing to use it, Esparza said.
I think that lawsuit had to do with the non-compete clause for the private SR-91 express lanes. It so screwed up the chances for improvements to SR-91 itself that California was compelled to buy the express lanes from the private owners.
hmmmmmmm.....
I drove for years wildcating freight anywhere i could.
Toll roads exempted me from paying my quarterly road use tax on the amount of miles I paid a toll for.
But if we could get 10 percent to take the Trans-Texas Corridor, we could make a difference, Roberts said. Of the 80,000 vehicles a day on I-35, a third of those are trucks. It could be a significant reduction.
About 2700 trucks traveling the 370 mile route paying .58 cpm. That's about $579,420 per day one way. How long to payoff $8 billion > 14,807 days or 40.5 yrs.
For trucks and cars or only cars?
I see plenty of higher-speed roads in surrounding states where there is one speed limit for cars and another for trucks, with the trucks being kept back 5 or 10 MPH.
I haven't the faintest idea what was going through the mind of the idiot who wrote the reg. It is absolutely absurd. Let's say that it was due to fungal spores -- fungus in wet hay requires ambient temps to be above, oh, about 60F, and the hay needs time to "ferment" the sugars in the plant material -- like weeks.
The way the highway patrols and the US DOT is interpreting the rule is that hay carried on a truck in a rainstorm better be tarped, or they're going to cite any hay truck driver without a hazmat on his CDL for some pretty stiff fines.
Where rules, regulations and impact on business from regulatory law-making is concerned, the Bush administration has been a complete failure. There isn't a regulation that the Bush administration has rolled back and there's plenty more besides they've heaped on private industry, especially the truck, fuel and ag industry.
"Plus, tolls are tax deductible,"
If your talking about how much you can deduct for expenses, that is already set at a cost per mile traveled. Do you have a source saying tolls are tax deductable?
Anybody who has ever cheated on auto expenses knows you can easily squeeze out an extra 100 bucks on parking and tolls.
Anybody who has ever cheated on auto expenses knows you can easily squeeze out an extra 100 bucks on parking and tolls.
My business truck has a set deduction amount they allow per miles driven. (less than 50 cents per mile deduction) We don't pay for tolls, yet, in this area and I never pay to park while at work.
I guess you don't have a source?
I think most people take the standard per mile deduction.
Meeeeeechigan and, I think, Ohio on non-turnpike roads come to mind.
I haven't heard of any car-only stipulations for the 85 mph limit.
I wonder if the speed will be subject to the Texas nigttime speed limit of 65?
this used to be the case the irs closed this loophole
now you pay tolls and fuel taxes....aka....doubledipping
Roughly a 60.00 toll for a round trip to San Antonio from Houston.
That is a non-starter. Won't happen.
no combustible material.
Thanks for the ping!
"If I were you, I would hire a new accountant"
Thanks, I'll discuss this with him. Like I said, our tollbooths are not active yet and parking is not an issue in my job.
...and -- if they are liberals -- count on it...
I'd pay a toll to get AWAY from the trucks. I-70 through Missouri is the worst. They go over the speed limit, have weights that have contributed to the destruction of the road, and almost every fatal accident on I-70 involves a semi. I'd be glad to stay out of their way, use a better road and deal with less traffic and greater visibility.
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