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Trans Texas Corridor could be San Marcos' new neighbor
San Marcos Daily Record ^ | February 4, 2005 | ANITA MILLER

Posted on 02/05/2005 6:34:20 PM PST by Tolerance Sucks Rocks

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To: ken21

Just out of interest, do you have a link for that?


121 posted on 02/06/2005 3:04:36 PM PST by Tolerance Sucks Rocks (Deport 'em all; let Fox sort 'em out!)
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To: Tolerance Sucks Rocks

Thanks Tolerance, the link was fine, it was my stupid router. It would update FR, but not provide me with links to other sites. So I thought that the referenced site was dead. Others also said that the link was fine, and I apologized to them in Posting # 73.


122 posted on 02/06/2005 5:30:45 PM PST by BobL
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To: dennisw

I remember reading about the nafta super highway years ago. It's supposed to go all the way down to Panama, eventually.


123 posted on 02/06/2005 5:47:24 PM PST by monkeywrench
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To: Tolerance Sucks Rocks

Ok That'll make friends and influence people. I'm in if yall think of others let me know.


124 posted on 02/06/2005 6:52:41 PM PST by Rightly Biased (I believe If you can't say something good about somebody your probably talking about Hillary Clinton)
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To: BobL

Why do you consider a gas tax good but tolls bad? Both get us to the point of building needed roads, but with very different outcomes:

-- Tolls get roads built faster.

-- Tolls are spent 100% on roads. A good part of the gas tax goes to fund public education and DPS. So, penny for penny, tolls are more efficient than a gas tax.

-- Finally, I only pay a toll if I choose to take the road. If I don't want to pay the toll, I don't have to take the road, since there is a free alternative. Also, tolls stay local, whereas gas tax money can and would probably be spent on road projects I'll never drive on.

Seems to me tolls are the preferable conservative option.


125 posted on 02/07/2005 11:10:53 AM PST by guschat
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To: BobL

Good lord. Read the entire exchange, and don't just cherry-pick a few lines you think make your point.

Transcript:

THE PRESS: Mr. Lopez, in looking at the proposal, are you planning on having any type of non-compete clause for future expansion of I-35 in order to attract as much traffic as possible to the Trans-Texas Corridor 35?

MR. LOPEZ: I guess this is more a question for the Commission or the officers of the state. What I can answer to you is that in our -- in the terms of engagement that have been presented to the would-be winner, there's no restriction on -- or there's no limit to competition from existing roads or no limit to other roads being built and things like that.

(Translation, the Cintra rep says there would be no restriction on competition.)

Transcript Continued:

THE PRESS: Including expansions from four lanes to six, or --

MR. WILLIAMSON: Well, let me answer that question, while also asking Tony's question.

We're on the record, Ben and Tony, as you know, of saying we fully expect that there will be limitations on our ability, at some point in the future, to compete with the road he is going to spend his money on and pay us for. We believe that profit is a decent and honorable pursuit and that for him to pay his franchise taxes in Texas, he's going to have to generate some profits.

We're not afraid of that. He offers to take us out of the risk business in offering an alternative corridor parallel to 35, and he offers us cash in exchange for that.

Now, it will be up to Commissioner Nichols and Commissioner Houghton, Ben, to see to it that staff stays within certain Commission guidelines. Among that, I'm sure, are be sure we can expand 35 to six lanes the entire length of the highway.

But all of our decisions, you have to remember, are made, not in the context of what would you like to do, Commission, but what do you have the cash to do.

And the reality, Patrick, is we don't have the money to expand Interstate 35 much bigger than six lanes. It's not -- we're in a different position than, say, the California legislature a few years ago when the Orange County issue came up. They were flush with cash and could have done a lot of things. We don't have that luxury.

As you saw from the presentation ahead of the layout, which we put out there for you to look at, Gordon, we don't have the cash to go expand Interstate 35 much beyond six lanes. So it's really not much of a consideration for us.

But even if it is, these guys are willing to build it for the taxpayers of the state so that we don't have to raise their taxes, pay us additional cash so we can consider some things we might not have considered, and for that, they need to have an expectation they can generate a profit, and we shouldn't be ashamed of that.

(Translation, Williamson says TxDOT is not afraid to compete with Cintra, they plan to expand the entire length of I-35 to six lanes, and while they would like to do more, the only limitation on them is the resources they have available for expansion beyond 6 total lanes, which would be a HUGE improvement.)


126 posted on 02/07/2005 1:23:54 PM PST by guschat
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To: guschat
"-- Tolls are spent 100% on roads. A good part of the gas tax goes to fund public education and DPS. So, penny for penny, tolls are more efficient than a gas tax."

Let's try to get accurate here. Cintra is NOT Mother Teresa, and they could not give a damn about the road system in Texas (other than behaving long enough to sign a bunch more secret contracts with Perry). That is what capitalism is, and you well know that.

So, Cintra is here to make money. And that is fine. And if they want to charge a lot of money, that is also fine. After all, any other company can just condemn a 400 mile strip of land and lay in a competing toll road, right next to Cintra's. In your dreams, pal. We're talking monopoly here and you well know it.

But if you think, for one moment that all of the money that Cintra collects will stay in Texas, I've got a 6 Billion dollar road to sell you. Cintra will take our money and spend it anywhere they want. It's probably safe to assume that a whole lot of Spanish shareholders are going to make out like bandits on the backs of Texans. You may be fine with that, but I sure as heck am not.

Now, if you meant that tolling by TXDOT could keep the money spent in Texas, then you have a much stronger case. Actually, I think that you've confused Government Tolling with Private Sector tolling, so I'll forgive you.


"If I don't want to pay the toll, I don't have to take the road, since there is a free alternative."

That's speculation, unless you have insight into the contract and the negotiations that the rest of us do not have (and please share it, if you have it - I may be wasting a lot of time speculating). We do not know what Texas will be allowed to do with its freeways, once we sign with Cintra. If it's anything like the experiences in California and Canada, the answer is: let them rot. I did not vote for Perry in 1998 to have him sign away control of the freeway system, and I don't think very many others did - either in 1998 or 2002.

So DON'T tell me that I'm not affected, unless you can PROVE to me that the State of Texas can do anything they want with I-35 and any other state-built highway (and, by the way, proving means something in Texas law guiding the negotiations). It is our business. You may not like us "little people" speaking up, but it sure as heck is OUR BUSINESS.


"Seems to me tolls are the preferable conservative option."

You may call a government-protected, private-enterprise monopoly "conservative", but most of us little people think that it is highway robbery.
127 posted on 02/07/2005 3:55:09 PM PST by BobL
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To: guschat
"Translation, Williamson says TxDOT is not afraid to compete with Cintra, they plan to expand the entire length of I-35 to six lanes, and while they would like to do more, the only limitation on them is the resources they have available for expansion beyond 6 total lanes, which would be a HUGE improvement."

Again, we don't know that, since the negotiations are SECRET. Cintra (and Ontario, for that matter), at minimum, deceived the people of Canada by making them think that Ontario retained ultimate control over toll rates. The Canadians learned the hard way that were fooled, and now Cintra is free to charge whatever they want.

Also (I feel like a broken record), Do your really think that Cintra would leave the future of I-35 totally under the control of Texas - where, if Texas could find the money (and the room, in some cases) - Texas could add 3 lanes to I-35, making it 5 lanes each way, and totally wipe out Cintra's $7.2 Billion investment. Cintra is not that stupid - although the people in Austin appear to be really stupid.

As to anything that Mr. Lopez might say - it means NOTHING. What matters is what's signed.


(now I'll quote myself - to make a point)


"Texas could add 3 lanes to I-35"

(typically toll road supporter): Yea, right pal. Just WHERE do you think Texas would get that kind of money?


(my answer): Texans will be so angry at Perry (hopefully out of office by then) and Cintra, that they will demand punishment. And the best way to provide that punishment is to expand I-35. Now, if Kay gets elected because of these toll-road scams, Kay would have a serious mandate to raise the gas tax and punish Cintra - if she chose to do so.

Far out, maybe. But it is this possibility that REQUIRES that Cintra be protected against any new competition. And again, that's what makes it the business of the "little people".
128 posted on 02/07/2005 4:11:40 PM PST by BobL
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To: BobL

Gee, thanks for forgiving me. That's big of you. However, by all press accounts, Cintra is putting up $7.2 billion to build this corridor -- $1.2 billion of that is cash to the state to be used for other transportation needs. The tolls on the corridor will repay Cintra for taking on the risk. Therefore, all the toll money is going to pay for roads. Gas tax money, on the other hand, doesn't. Public education gets 25% of the gas tax. So right off the bat, your 20 cents per gallon gas tax increase becomes only 15 cents for actual road building. And that's before you take out the $400 million or so DPS currently takes from gas tax revenues for public safety.

Also, last time I checked Cintra can't condemn land. The government can, but the government is going to have to condemn land to build any type of highway, whether taxpayer funded through a gas tax or toll funded. You go on and on about expanding I-35, but how much do you think I-35 can be expanded???? Do you drive it? If so, you will see that the frontage road of I-35 is highly developed. Highly developed means very, very expensive to expand. Think prohibitly expensive, unless you think all those McDonald's and Dairy Queen franchisees are going to donate their land for the expansion...

By the way, Zachary, a San Antonio based company is actually going to build the road, not Cintra.

Finally, do you honestly believe the state is going to shut down I-35?!?! Not to mention the fact that it is a federal highway, so something tells me it's still going to be around. And, according to the link you provided, TxDOT has plans to add additional lanes to the whole of I-35.

I'm sure if blogs existed during te days of Eisenhower, the same debates would have been held about the interstate highway system.


129 posted on 02/07/2005 4:31:10 PM PST by guschat
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To: guschat
"The tolls on the corridor will repay Cintra for taking on the risk. Therefore, all the toll money is going to pay for roads. "

Please don't treat me like an idiot. I have not done the same to you. So: What obligates Cintra to put ALL of the money into roads. Sure, they will want to pay off their debt, but what about the other 50% of what they collect. Does Texas ever get to see any of it?

Again, if you have access to information that us little people don't, please share it. Otherwise, I have to assume that Cintra is in this to make some money, some big money. After all, isn't that also capitalism.


As far as diverting of gas money - you're making the same 'mistake' as an earlier poster. Just because 25% of the gas tax money is being diverted today does not mean that 25% of that money has to be diverted tomorrow. The legislature can do whatever they want with that money - and in fact, they could end the diversion and give TXDOT a huge shot in the arm without even raising the tax. But why bother, when you've got Cintra to rob Texans anyway.


"You go on and on about expanding I-35, but how much do you think I-35 can be expanded????"

Yes - I lived in California for 10 years, and I've seen how creative planners can be when it comes to fitting in a lot of lanes in very tight places. Austin is nowhere near that level, yet.

"Finally, do you honestly believe the state is going to shut down I-35?!?!"

I don't think that I said shutdown I-35, but I did mean that freeways and highways on the entire corridor parallel to I-35 will be frozen in time - at best, once the contract is signed with Cintra. I did say that they may rot, but that's because I don't even know if we'll be allowed to resurface the road in the future (since, even a resurfaced road will draw traffic from Cintra, especially truck traffic - so they may not permit it) - I just don't have any access to what's being negotiated. Do you?.

As for I-35 itself, we'll just see. I know that the governor tried at least 3 times in the last year to impose tolls on freeways (2 built, one of those being an Interstate, with the third nearly complete), so I have no clue what's in store for I-35 - other than to be absolutely convinced that Cintra will NEVER let Texans have any say in it (NEVER being defined as 50+ years).
130 posted on 02/07/2005 5:09:13 PM PST by BobL
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To: BobL

How crazy is it to allow some foreign company to construct a toll road in Texas or any state? I have many objections to private toll roads. But why should the profits from tolls go to some damn Europeans? This is aggravating


131 posted on 02/07/2005 8:00:32 PM PST by dennisw (Qur’an 9:3 “Allah and His Messenger dissolve obligations.”)
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To: dennisw

"But why should the profits from tolls go to some damn Europeans?"

...especially when they may be a huge amount of money. No one knows now, because the negotiations are SECRET and there is no OFFICIAL guiding policy that's been disclosed to the public.


132 posted on 02/07/2005 8:08:05 PM PST by BobL
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To: BobL

The old and more corrupt North East is full of "Authorities". Which are quasi public agencies with unique abilities to take on massive public works, issue bonds, and make them pay their way via tolls. This is what ya'll are setting yourselves up for in Texas.

You know that disastrous Big Dig up in Boston with the leaking tunnels? It's all done for an "Authority" which will manage it and will collect tolls.


133 posted on 02/07/2005 8:24:20 PM PST by dennisw (Qur’an 9:3 “Allah and His Messenger dissolve obligations.”)
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To: BobL

Cintra is putting up front $7.2 billion in funding for the new corridor.

By the way, you are flat wrong about the diversion of the gas tax revenues. The legislature can't "do whatever they want with that money," nor can they end the diversion tomorrow as you claim. The Texas Constitution (article 8, section 7-a) requires that 1/4 of the gas tax SHALL be allocated to the Available School Fund. Unless you're calling for the complete suspension of the constitution, which I admit I've missed in your previous posts, the legislature would first have to pass a constitutional amendment, which requires 2/3 of both houses, then it goes on the ballot, and then if a majority of voters agree with you, which I'm guessing they wouldn't, then the legislature could change the funding the next time it writes a budget, in 2 1/2 years. We could get toll roads built quicker than that.


134 posted on 02/08/2005 10:50:53 AM PST by guschat
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To: guschat

"By the way, you are flat wrong about the diversion of the gas tax revenues."

My apologies then - I'm not an expert on the inner workings of Austin. I only know what I read - and I hadn't seen it either way - either in the Constitution or as legislation, so I certainly won't dispute what you say. I just figured that the this was simply legislation, as it is done at the federal level.

So, yes, it would take the same process that gave us the Constitutional Amendment(s). And, yes, it's certainly tougher to amend the state constitution, then simply passing legislation.

On the other hand, the constitution was amended to allow "creative" financing of highways, and virtually no one had any clue of what was in store for us.

So, for the time being, the schools can keep their 25% share, for all I care, and we can raise the gas tax a bit more to cover (of course, since money is fungible, there are other ways to cover the education diversion, if they want to do so).


135 posted on 02/08/2005 3:28:46 PM PST by BobL
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To: Tolerance Sucks Rocks
Interview (Audio) NPR | February 8, 2005 A Superhighway for Texas?
136 posted on 02/09/2005 7:41:34 AM PST by Paleo Conservative (Hey! Hey! Ho! Ho! Andrew Heyward's got to go!)
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To: Tolerance Sucks Rocks
Interview (Audio) NPR | February 8, 2005 A Superhighway for Texas?
137 posted on 02/09/2005 7:43:27 AM PST by Paleo Conservative (Hey! Hey! Ho! Ho! Andrew Heyward's got to go!)
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