Opponents:
Collin-Denton toll
plan a 'road to riches'
April 9, 2007
By
BRAD WATSON, WFAA-TV
While Governor Rick
Perry and others
call it a way to get
traffic moving,
opponents claim
plans to connect a
toll road to U.S.
Highway 75 to
Interstate 35 is
actually a "road to
riches."
Critics of the
plan to operate
State Highway 121 in
Denton and Collin
counties as toll
roads said the
proposal is based on
what a foreign
company, that would
build-out and run
Highway 121, is
telling investors.
As traffic snakes
along the frontage
roads of Highway
121, some drivers
expressed a
readiness for it to
turn into a toll
way.
"You have to pay
to get some place
around," said one
motorist.
However, other
drivers aren't so
quick to believe in
the project.
"I think Governor
Perry is screwing
us," said another
driver.
But in a new
offensive, toll
opponents said that
the Spanish company
that would run 121
views area drivers
not as customers,
but as a way to make
money in a monopoly.
In a document to
investors, Cintra
wrote that Highway
121 "runs through
the most affluent
counties of the
Dallas area" and
noted incomes are
higher than average
in the area.
A citizens group
against toll roads
said they believe
the comments reveal
the plan is cashing
in on area
residents.
"That's money
that they intend to
capture for their
project, and for
their profit that
will leave those
counties," said
David Stall,
CorridorWatch.
Officials who
want Highway 121 as
a toll road said it
is not greed, but a
desire for a quick
completion and the
upfront $2 billion
from Cintra for use
on other road
projects that
motivated them.
"We will be in
gridlock by the year
2025 if we do not
use these
alternative tools to
build these
roadways," said
Linda Koop, Regional
Transportation
Council.
Cintra told
investors there's no
competition since
Highway121 "provides
a corridor to Dallas
on which there are
no alternative
roads."
Toll costs one
way on the 23 mile
segment will start
at about $3.30 when
it opens, but in 50
years would rise to
more than $13.
Support for a two
year moratorium on
private toll roads
grows in the
legislature and on
the frontage roads
because of these
concerns.