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    Monday, May 06, 2024

    Malloy seeks tolls, gas-tax hike to rebuild infrastructure

    Gov. Dannel Malloy holds a news conference in the shadow of the Gold Star Memorial Bridge in New London to tout the successful effort to fund his transportation infrastructure initiative on June 12, 2015. Repairs to the Gold Star Bridge are included in those plans. (Sean D. Elliot/The Day)
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    Gov. Dannel P. Malloy will ask legislators this year to establish electronic tolling on Connecticut highways by mid-2022 and to phase in a 7-cent gasoline tax hike to not only avert insolvency in the transportation program but also fund a major, 30-year rebuilding initiative.

    Malloy, who announced his plans Wednesday, will propose the final budget adjustments of his administration next week to the General Assembly.

    The governor, who declared last year he would not seek a third term, said these revenues would rescue not only an aging, clogged network but also an economy handicapped by an inadequate transportation infrastructure.

    “We stand at a crossroads in Connecticut,” the governor said during a mid-morning announcement at the state Capitol. “We need to make a decision, and we need to make it soon.”

    Connecticut roads, bridges and rail lines are falling into disrepair, the governor said. “And we have failed to build that world-class transportation system that has been built and is in the process of being built in the states around us.”

    What is at stake, he added, is not just a viable transportation system and healthy community, but also a vibrant economy. “It is about growing our economy today, tomorrow and far into the future,” he said.

    The governor’s plan would boost the state’s retail gasoline tax, currently at 25 cents, by 7 cents in four stages, starting with a 2-cent hike in July. Connecticut would add another penny in July 2019, 2 cents more in mid-2020, and the final 2 cents in July 2021.

    Details of toll system still to be resolved

    The administration estimates electronic tolling could be implemented by the 2022-23 fiscal year.

    The governor’s proposal would authorize the state Department of Transportation to craft the details of a new tolling system, including the fees and locations of electronic toll readers. But Malloy said Connecticut’s system certainly would be different from those of some other states, including neighbor Massachusetts.

    That’s because Connecticut’s highways have more entrance and exit ramps than the systems in many other states.

    Both Malloy and DOT Commissioner James Redeker said very preliminary estimates are that a tolling system, once fully implemented, would raise $600 million to $800 million per year, and that roughly 30 percent of those receipts would come from out-of-state motorists.

    Other components of the governor’s plan include establishing a $3-per-tire fee on all tire purchases and accelerating the previously approved transfer of certain sales tax receipts from the General Fund to the Special Transportation Fund.

    Transportation fund in fiscal crisis

    On paper, the state’s transportation program, while not flourishing, is stable.

    According to projections released in late October by the legislature’s nonpartisan Office of Fiscal Analysis, the transportation fund will run in the black annually at least through 2022.

    But that forecast doesn’t assume any major expansion in capital projects, and officials from both parties acknowledge Connecticut has underinvested in transportation infrastructure for decades.

    The state has roughly $3.7 billion in transportation borrowing approved by the legislature and the State Bond Commission that still hasn’t been executed yet. The chief reasons for Connecticut’s transportation bonding backlogs are a lack of staffing in the DOT and inadequate resources within the Special Transportation Fund to cover more debt service.

    The alternative to all of these cutbacks, according to the administration, is a series of annual deficits in the transportation program starting with the fiscal year that begins July 1. The transportation fund would reach insolvency by mid-2020.

    On Jan. 10 the governor and Redeker outlined nearly 400 capital projects worth $4.3 billion that would be suspended over the next five years because of inadequate funding.

    Will election politics sink transportation debate?

    Traditionally, legislatures are reluctant to consider tax hikes and other revenue-raisers, such as tolls, during a state election year like 2018.

    But Malloy and others said there will be strong pressure to ignore election concerns.

    The governor made his announcement Wednesday surrounded by representatives of construction companies, labor trades, regional councils of government, a handful of legislators and other transportation advocates.

    “I think there’s a more complete coalition” pressing for a transportation investment than in past years, the governor said.

    And as more people become aware that Connecticut’s clogged transportation system is hindering job growth, particularly in the high-paying financial services sector in Fairfield County, support should only grow, the governor and others said.

    “I think it's pretty obvious that just keeping the Special Transportation Fund solvent from year to year simply doesn’t work,” said Don Shubert, president of the Connecticut Construction Industry Association. “Connecticut’s transportation programs have been severely compromised. ... We can continue to barrel down the road to ruin in this state or we can invest.”

    Rep. Tony Guerrera, D-Rocky Hill, one of the legislature’s most vocal advocates for electronic tolling and greater transportation investment, conceded that forcing a debate in the 2018 General Assembly session, which begins next Wednesday, won’t be easy. But House Speaker Joe Aresimowicz told Guerrera afterward that there would be a House vote on tolls in the 2018 session.

    Democratic gubernatorial contender Ned Lamont of Greenwich offered support for tolls.

    But two GOP gubernatorial contenders, Danbury Mayor Mark Boughton and Trumbull First Selectman Tim Herbst, quickly came down in opposition.

    Malloy made big transportation pitch in 2015

    Malloy tried to make transportation the centerpiece of his second term in office.

    In February 2015, three months after winning re-election, the governor proposed a 30-year, $100 billion program to rebuild Connecticut’s transportation system.

    But efforts to secure long-term funding bogged down. That’s because of both political opposition to tolls and fuel tax hikes as well as Malloy’s insistence that lawmakers first endorse a constitutional “lockbox” provision to ensure revenues dedicated for transportation are used solely for that purpose.

    That lockbox proposal has been endorsed by the legislature and will be considered by voters on the state ballot this November.

    Lawmakers agreed in the spring of 2015 to dedicate a portion of sales tax receipts to transportation. This was deemed the key to funding the first five years of the governor’s 30-year program, through 2020.

    Even though receipts from the state’s wholesale fuel tax also are projected to grow through 2022, surging debt costs would overwhelm that growth if Connecticut is to catch up on its deferred maintenance and other infrastructure investment.

    A gubernatorial study panel recommended several options in early 2016 to fund the final 25 years, including restoring tolls to highways, increasing gasoline taxes and boosting sales taxes. These options, which would raise an estimated $42 billion over 30 years, have not been adopted.

    Keith M. Phaneuf is a reporter for The Connecticut Mirror (www.ctmirror.org). Copyright 2018 © The Connecticut Mirror.

    kphaneuf@ctmirror.org

    An Align M690L, unmanned aerial systems owned and operated by Exponent Technology Service, flies alongside the northbound side of the Gold Star Bridge on Aug. 23, 2016, to photograph and record video to be used for bridge inspection. The inspection workers are operating the device from the Thames River State Boat Launch parking lot in New London. (Tim Martin/The Day)
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