Posted on 10/10/2017 5:17:00 AM PDT by Tolerance Sucks Rocks
Last Thursday, Maryland Governor Larry Hogan unveiled a $9 billion project to widen three of the states most heavily trafficked highways: I-270, I-495also known as the Capital Beltwayand MD-295, the Baltimore-Washington Parkway.
What the governors office dubbed the Traffic Relief Plan involves constructing two express toll lanes each wayor four total toll lanesto all three highways. Widening the Capital Beltway and the section of I-270 connecting the growing commuter-city of Frederick to Washington, D.C., would cost an estimated $7.6 billion, which the state expects to be financed via public-private partnerships: Private companies would build and maintain the new toll lanes, sending a portion of their revenue to the state every year. Hogans office billed that effort as the largest proposed P3 highway project in North America.
The revenue from those toll lanes would also fund the expansion of the Baltimore-Washington Parkway, a comparatively bucolic 32-mile-long two-lane that largely parallels four-lane-wide Interstate 95. Doubling its capacity to four lanes is expected to cost $1.4 billion and comes with the added hurdle of convincing the National Park Service to hand over the woodsy route to the Maryland Transportation Authority.
On paper, this looks like a textbook example of the sort of voter-friendly infrastructure project that the Trump Administration has been promoting: privately funded and auto-centric. But in a state once considered a leader on sprawl-containing Smart Growth policies, this is also a kind of pave-a-thon from another eraone that comes with some extremely unrealistic cost estimates.
When I heard about the governors announcement, I thought, Theres a 20th-century solution to a 21st-century problem, says Emily Scarr, director of Maryland Public Interest Research Group (PIRG).
A P3 Primer
Americas second-most popular governor is a blue-state Republican who has been adept at maintaining a safe distance from President Donald Trump while serving the needs of the states millions of suburban voter-drivers. This plan is aimed squarely at that cohort, and they are indeed hurting: Washington, D.C., now tops the list of gridlock-plagued cities in the U.S., with 82 hours of delay per commuter, according to the Texas A&M Transportation Institute. Maryland Department of Transportation spokeswoman Erin Henson told the Baltimore Sun that rush hour traffic on each of the highways in the Hogan plan amounts to seven hours every weekday. Daily, thats 260,000 cars on I-270, 240,000 on I-495, and another 120,000 on the Baltimore-Washington Parkway. These three massive, unprecedented projects will be absolutely transformative, and they will help Maryland citizens go about their daily lives in a more efficient and safer manner, Hogan proclaimed at the unveiling event.
A key feature of Hogans proposal is the premise that high-occupancy toll lanes are essentially self-financing: With private developers shouldering the design, construction, and maintenance costs and tolls serving as a reliable source of regular revenue, the project would be subsidized by the legion of well-heeled commuters willing to pay extra to escape gridlock. And the suburbs of D.C., home of Americas four wealthiest counties, have no lack of them. Not only do P3s dramatically decrease the cost to taxpayers, they also have the potential to generate billions of dollars in much-needed revenue for the state, Hogan said at the announcement last week. It wont cost us tax dollars.
But toll roads arent always cash-making slam-dunks: Virginia, a leader in P3-style highway projects, has tempered its enthusiasm for the model lately. And theres a similar project nearby that shows this new highway expansion might be making promises it cant keep. In 2014, 8-mile-long, two-lane express toll lanes opened on I-95 north of Baltimore. Then-Governor Martin OMalleys administration pegged the cost of the project at $645 million, an estimate that ballooned to $1.49 billion. Anticipated revenue from tolls has fallen short: The total toll collected on those lanes over one year from 2015 to 2016? Just $11.4 million, according to Ben Ross, chair of the Maryland Transit Opportunities Coalition.
They say its a P3 and claim the taxpayers dont have to pay any money, but even if the entire $9 billion is put up by a private partnership, that doesnt mean residents and taxpayers arent paying in another way, says Matt Casale, transportation advocate with U.S. PIRG.
For Whom, the Tolls?
The highway plans main goal, as the name says, is traffic relief. The principle of induced demand is a familiar one to CityLab readers, and gets frequently invoked by foes of highway-widening. But making the new lanes a priced resource can change that equation. If new lanes are free, everyone crowds in, so you pay for using the road in time and gas wasted rather than money, says Loyola University Maryland economics professor Stephen Walters. But theres lots of evidence that the price systemtollsworks very well to reallocate demand over time, coaxing those who value the road least at peak times not to use it then, while making high-valuing users pay for the privilege.
When Stockholm implemented congestion charges on several highways in 2006, traffic was shown to decrease by 22 percent. Marylands Intercounty Connector was constructed in 2011 as a toll highway expressly for the purpose of easing congestion on the Beltway, and, according to AAA, it looks like that has slowly begun to happen.
Still, PIRGs Casale submits that the danger of induced demand lurks in any sort of highway expansion, even one that makes use of toll lanes. As PIRG has discussed in a series of reports, many highway expansions in the U.S. are tolled expressways, yet exhibit the same problems that non-tolled expressways do: New lanes attract more drivers, which leads to more traffic, which leads to congested roadwayseven before the lanes are fully operational.
In North Carolina, tolled express lanes are currently being added to I-77 through a P3 arrangement. But since construction began, the project has already run into many problems. The private construction firm that the state hired has created a 26-mile work-zone where drivers had to dodge roadway debris. Congestion has increased and crashes are up 41 percent, Casale says.
New toll expressways also raise the divisive specter of Lexus lanes, something with which Californians are familiar: tolled expressways that are too expensive for many drivers to use. In 2009, the Maryland State Highway Administration completed a study to assess potential costs incurred to widen I-270 from Frederick to Shady Grove using tolled expressways, and concluded it would cost no less than $4 billion. To pay that back over 30 years, the pro-rail Maryland Transit Opportunities Coalition estimated that the state would have to charge $38 per car to drive the 28 miles from Frederick to Shady Grove in Montgomery County.
Whats more, expanding I-270 and the Capital Beltway in what are already crowded population centers and residential regions will require displacing people and housesfurther driving up costs. That same 2009 study from the SHA said a widening of I-270 will displace a large number of residences and requires minor property takings.And development around the Beltway is far more dense; the current ring road threads through some of the most valuable real estate in the country.
Where the heck do four lanes go around the Beltway? wonders Dru Schmidt-Perkins, executive director of the transit-friendly advocacy group 1000 Friends of Maryland.
A Rebuke to Rail Fans
For Baltimore-area residents like Schmidt-Perkins, a highway mega-project aimed at suburban commuters is also a galling reminder of Hogans decision two years ago to cancel the Red Line, a 14.2-mile-long east-west Light Rail line that was supposed to help connect Baltimores most overlooked and impoverished neighborhoods to public transit. A major transportation project that had been planned for decades was stolen from Baltimore, she says.
The $2.9 billion budgeted for the Red Line was reallocated to highway spending across the state, and $900 million in federal money to be used on constructionone of only six projects nationwide to receive federal financial supportvanished. In place of the Red Line, the Hogan administration offered up BaltimoreLink, a $135 million route overhaul of the bus system in the city that launched this June. Samuel Jordan, president of the Baltimore Transit Equity Coalition, calls the comparatively minor bus makeover a dismissive, punitive consolation prize for what would be a transformative transportation project for the region and for Baltimore.
Now its the governors turn to bandy that phrase around. But his brand of transformative project still has a long road to travel before any commuter feels anything approaching relief: As Maryland Reporter columnist Barry Rascovar noted, the project faces years of legal and environmental reviews. Indeed, Hogan may be out of office by the time the first ground-breaking ceremony takes placewhich may be part of his strategy.
Schmidt-Perkins sounds equally skeptical. Theyre talking about massive infrastructure, massive tolls, at a time when there are so many urgent transportation needs in this state, she says. Its wackadoodle.
Maryland “Freak State” PING!
Gov’t has have VERY poor track record regarding tolls ever paying off any road construction, or at least going away.
True, but I think the model these days is that the tolls don’t go away, because they pay for ongoing maintenance, not just the initial construction.
Lol.. Are they keeping gas taxes too? People are crazy. Toll roads... How many times will you pay for the same patch of asphalt.
Virginia has already done this on I495 and I95 from the Maryland border south.
What bothers me is the corruption in the private partnership. Slick Eddie Rendell tried this with I80 when he was Pennsylvania governor.
Maryland? Well, given their harassment of 2A people, I stay clear of that hell hole besides the fact I rarely go north of the Carolinas these days.
How about cutting the size of the federal government by say, 50%?
Unfortunately, they also use it as a way to fund large expenses.
Just across the Potomac in VA, The Dulles toll road’s toll was raised to support the construction of the Metro’s Silver line. I have no doubt it will *not* go down when they finish that project.
We have got to be the most gullible people on the planet.
We pay something like 65 cents per gallon gas taxes these days.
Folks, that is enough to build highways and keep them up.
Why are we setting it up so it will cost us hundreds of dollars to drive cross country, in tolls?
I wouldn’t laugh at tolls - it was the way our founders and early settlers did it. Turnpikes literally and so on. It’s a usage fee. If you don’t use it, you don’t pay. What a novel concept.
In Orlando they are building toll roads down the center of I-4 where Congressman John Mica said for years that would never happen. Then one day, out of the blue, he changed his mind, and presto, the interstate highway is a toll road!
Oh, and the cost to use the toll portion of the road is based on how much traffic there is. If traffic is heavy it will cost more.
Where is all the money from stupid lotteries going? Where are the gas taxes going?
Amazingly, Mica was promptly kicked out of Congress by the voters.
Highways never pay for themselves.
Citizens do, and now private enterprises make a profit off it too.
Is there anyone here who thinks that lowers the cost?
Ha. Boy, do I LOATHE ‘going home’. $20+ just to see the other side of the family North of Philly for the 90min. commute up I95?? Uh, no. I’ll take the Sunday-lazy-drive up old Hwy1 and skip the tolls. Better scenery and just about the same amount of time as I don’t have the FassPass (too easy to ‘forgot’ and get a nice bill when you return from the visit.
Jax, FL been putting in HOV and expanding the bypass. As the post suggests, seems to have made traffic WORSE, not better ([never ending] construction, pattern shifts).
MD, no matter the depth of your pockets, govt will demand as much lint as it can get.
I inadvertently jumped on a section of Raleigh toll road. I was concerned about where to pay the toll. The mail you a bill
The bill was for $0.41, the postage was $0.43
I always laugh at tolls. Usage tax is different. Use ten feet of asphalt,pay each time.. usage. Tolls.. well your local state and federal taxes just aren’t cutting it.. so we need you to pay an additional tax and we will call it usage. It sounds better than how many times will idiots say ok to paying for the same ten feet of asphalt tax.
So toll roads on lots of places are in terrible shape, oh then we need a billion dollar stimulus. Some fancy signage saying thank you tax payers for your state, local, federal tax, and your tolls and.. your one Billion dollar union bailout.
If toll roads work, why are they in such bad shape?
“Govt has have VERY poor track record regarding tolls ever paying off any road construction, or at least going away.”
Don’t worry, it will be different this time. If it’s like the PPP’s throughout the rest of North American, the contract REQUIRES that the road be turned over to the state and then operated as a freeway, once the contract term is over (typically about 75 years).
“Why are we setting it up so it will cost us hundreds of dollars to drive cross country, in tolls?”
Because toll roads don’t cost anything, idiot...as you always have the option of walking to work.
(well, that’s what [paid] toll road shills claim, at least)
As the greater NYC area learned from Robert Moses....build more roads/lanes and they will fill up.
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