Perry
reiterates toll road support
Governor
tells builders the need for road funds
will
overcome critics
July
19, 2007
By RAD SALLEE, Houston
Chronicle
AUSTIN — Gov. Rick Perry told road
builders at the Texas Transportation
Forum here Thursday that he stands firm
in his support for toll roads and
public-private partnerships despite some
setbacks in the past legislative
session.
"When you have big dreams,"
he said, people tell you, "You can't get
there from here. But I assure you we can
get there from here, and we're going to
get there together."
Perry said traditional sources of
road funding — "a trickle of federal
funds and a gas tax that few legislators
would even think of raising" — aren't
nearly enough to meet the state's needs.
"There isn't even enough money to
maintain our current system," he said.
And the fuel tax "has problems on its
face," he said. Unlike toll roads, which
typically have a free alternative, fuel
taxes are paid by all drivers, and hit
rural residents hardest.
"The boys out in Lubbock, Odessa and
Marfa really don't see the benefit in it
for them," he said.
"If we don't build roads with
innovative financing and tolls, roads
are not going to be built in our state,"
he said.
Driving the private sector
Perry said even the prospect of the
state contracting with the private
sector to build and operate toll roads
is paying off.
"Projects that local toll road
authorities would not have bid on a few
years ago are now attracting very strong
interest because private companies are
now competing to build those same
projects," he said.
This was an apparent reference to the
North Texas Tollway Authority's offer to
pay the state $3.3 billion to build and
operate for profit in a 50-year lease, a
segment of Texas 121 in the Dallas area.
The offer topped a previous $2.8 billion
bid from the Spanish firm
Cintra.
"They may never say it," Perry said
of lawmakers opposed to such long-term
public-private toll partnerships, "but
the Legislature admitted we were on the
right track.
"While they were calling for a
moratorium on toll roads, on one hand,
they were insisting on toll road
projects in their own districts because
their constituents wanted to see things
moving. They wanted to see those roads
built."