Guest MINDSETTER™ Morgan: More Bad News for Taxpayers

Guest MINDSETTER™ Rep. Patricia Morgan

Guest MINDSETTER™ Morgan: More Bad News for Taxpayers

RIDOT is tearing down and rebuilding a perfectly good bridge. The Oxford Street bridge in the Thurbers Avenue area of I-95 holds a prime position in the Governor's toll scheme. Because of its central location, it is very difficult to detour around. Trucks traveling to and from Providence will have little choice but to pay a toll for the privilege. That will make the Oxford Street bridge lucrative and necessary to extract the maximum amount of toll revenue.

The problem is that the US Government does not allow toll gantries to be installed unless a bridge is reconstructed. Preventive maintenance does not qualify. RIDOT has plans to tear it down and replace it at the cost of $5.9 million. That doesn’t make much sense because inspection reports show that the bridge is in good shape. Out of 55 points for structural sufficiency, it received 45 (81%) and the bridge also received 29 of 30 points when rated for obsolescence. Sadly, for taxpayers and travelers alike, even though there are 177 bridges throughout Rhode Island in much worse shape, the Governor needs this perfectly fine bridge to maximize her toll scheme. The traveling public will pay dearly for these grand ambitions.

Unfortunately, there is more bad news if you pay taxes in Rhode Island. Many of you may not realize that every truck that drives in Rhode Island pays gas taxes and registration fees based on miles traveled. IFTA, the International Fuel Tax Agreement, collects GPS data and coordinates compliance.  

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When the Governor was selling the toll law to Rhode Islanders, she stated that 10,000 trucks travel through Rhode Island each day. Based on that number, she maintained that $45 million annually could be collected from them. To ease the pain on local trucking companies, the General Assembly, at her request, passed a bill that gave local trucks a break on their registration fees, costing $5.3 million and a Clean Diesel rebate that costs $1.9 million. Now it has been determined that that law also applies to out-of-state trucks, for a total of $8.8 million.

Using this information, the Republican Policy Group studied the actual net revenue Rhode Island can expect from truck tolls. After subtracting tolling costs, it is a paltry $7.4 million, 17% or 17 cents on the dollar that will go toward our roads and bridges. The other 83% is lost to gantry costs, lost registration revenue, and debt payments. If that doesn't make you nauseous, it gets worse.

A study performed by the unbiased American Transportation Research Institute using IFTA data collected via GPS from trucks concludes that only 3300 trucks, one-third of the promised number, actually travel through Rhode Island. Using the same deductions from the gross collections, we are in jeopardy of losing $21 million each year.

If we bring those projections to the middle and agree on a truck count of 6600, tolls will still deliver a deficit of $7 million every year. Who will fill that hole? Who will pay for the long list of RIDOT projects?

Will the Governor push to increase the tolls, adding to the costs of our retailers, grocery stores, and small businesses, making our cost of living even worse than before?  Or will she make the case that Rhode Island needs a car toll to pay for infrastructure?  Whatever the solution, it's hardworking average Rhode Islanders who will pay the price. We always do.

 

Patricia Morgan, RI House Republican Leader, Representative District26, West Warwick, Coventry and Warwick


RI Truck Tolls Controversy -- 2016

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