Perry signs bill
with toll road restrictions
06/11/2007
R.G. Ratcliffe, Austin Bureau,
SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS
AUSTIN — Gov. Rick
Perry on Monday signed legislation that slows
his ambitious plans for building toll roads but
does not halt them completely.
Perry and the Legislature got into a
stare-down last month when lawmakers sent him a
bill that put serious restrictions on building
toll roads in Texas and constrained policy set
by the Texas Transportation Commission, which is
run by the governor's appointees.
Perry said he would veto the bill and
threatened to call a special legislative session
if lawmakers did not send him compromise
legislation.
Senate Bill 792 was that compromise. It put a
two-year moratorium on toll road projects being
built by private companies under contracts with
the Texas Department of Transportation, which is
overseen by the commission.
The compromise legislation does not affect
six road construction projects for the Harris
County Toll Road Authority, and it also allows
the Dallas-Fort Worth region to proceed with
highways already in the pipeline. The moratorium
prohibits two private toll road projects in San
Antonio.
Perry said he was "proud" to sign the
compromise bill.
"Under this legislation, every planned road
construction project will move forward as
scheduled, local leaders will have more
authority to build new toll roads and all toll
revenue will be used for transportation projects
in the area it was raised," Perry said.
Toll road opponent Linda Stall of
CorridorWatch said the moratorium will keep
Perry's transportation officials from signing
any more comprehensive development agreements
with private toll road companies until after a
study is done.
Stall said the legislative fight showed
lawmakers were reacting to voters who
disapproved of the Trans-Texas Corridor plans.
"This legislative session really demonstrated
that while the governor may have a tight rein on
transportation policy, the legislators have
heard their constituents and recognize that the
direction TxDOT has been headed in over the last
few years is not what the citizens of Texas are
interested in," Stall said.
The bill will ensure that local toll road
authorities have the first option to build local
toll roads and can use state rights of way as
needed.
The bill also will limit development
agreements with private toll road companies so
that the state can buy back the roads after 50
years, and it lets the transportation department
issue $3 billion in bonds to borrow against
future gas-tax revenue as equity for state toll
roads.