Perry Speaks Out Against Moratorium
On Private Toll Road Projects
April 3, 2007
KWTX
(April 3, 2007)—Gov. Rick Perry spoke out Tuesday against
proposed legislation that would put a two-year moratorium on
private toll road projects including the Trans-Texas Corridor
and urged lawmakers to “ensure vital transportation projects
continue as planned.”
Several bills are pending in Austin aimed at putting the
brakes on the massive highway project.
State Representative Lois W. Kolkhorst of Brenham has filed a
bill that would kill the project altogether and a second measure
that calls for a two-year moratorium on allowing private
entities from buying the rights to build and operate toll roads.
During a visit with US Transportation Secretary Mary Peters
Tuesday to the Samsung Austin Semiconductor expansion site,
Perry said the state's current transportation system, which
involves public-private partnerships to build toll roads, must
go on if Texas is to continue attracting big companies and jobs.
Perry says the state will always own the land beneath private
toll roads and there will always be a free road alternative for
motorists.
The governor says federal highway money is drying up.
Both he and Peters said it's important to find road funding
methods beyond the gas tax.
“Let no one be confused: there are no such things as
freeways,” Perry said.
“There are taxways and tollways, and for 50 years we have
tried taxways that have been underfunded by Austin and
Washington and that have left local communities choking on
pollution and brimming with congestion," he said.
The toll road moratorium bills in the Texas House and Senate
remain pending in committee.
Work on the Central Texas portion of the Trans Texas Corridor
project could begin within four years, the Texas Department of
Transportation said last fall as it released a plan identifying
near- mid- and long-term phases of the privately developed toll
road.
The plan identifies portions of the corridor from north of
Temple to near Hillsboro and from Georgetown to Temple as among
the likely near-term phases of the project, on which work could
begin by 2010 and could be completed by 2013.
The Temple-to-Hillsboro leg of the $184 billion corridor
would cost an estimated $1.1 billion to design and build. The
Georgetown-to-Temple leg would cost about $1 billion to design
and build.
Designers ultimately envision a corridor with six separate
passenger vehicle lanes and four commercial truck lanes; two
high speed passenger rail lines, two freight rain lines and two
commuter rail lines and a utility zone that will accommodate
water, electric, natural gas, petroleum, fiber optic and
telecommunications lines.