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Texas: Gas
Tax Dollars Spent to Build Park
Texas Department of Transportation that claims it has no
money for roads uses $20 million in gas tax funds to build a
park.
The Woodall Rodgers Park Foundation announced yesterday that the
Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT) would hand over $20
million in gas tax funds to help build a 5.2 acre park near
downtown Dallas. The $67 million park is intended to serve as a
model public-private partnership with a restaurant, a children's
playground and a dog park. It will have no roads.
"The park... will connect Uptown, Downtown and the Arts
District, and is expected to become a regional attraction," the
foundation explained in a statement.
TxDOT on several occasions has made the claim that the agency is
"out of money" and therefore has no choice but to convert
existing freeways into toll roads (view
TxDOT plan). In February, the state's top two legislative
leaders called for an audit
of TxDOT's finances after the agency admitted that it had
misstated its finances by more than $1 billion, helping to
create the impression that it was out of money.
People for Efficient Transportation founder
Sal Costello
questioned TxDOT's motives in spending gas tax funds on the
project.
"I'm all for parks, but why is money from our transportation
budget paying for a park?" Costello asked. "And why would TxDOT
give $20 million to a foundation full of special interests
instead of the city to do the job?"
Costello pointed out that the foundation's board and steering
committee include key employees of companies that stand to
profit from the agency's toll road plans that are in need of
public relations support. JP Morgan is part of the team that
intends to build the Trans Texas Corridor toll road. Carter and
Burgess, a Fort Worth-based engineering consultant is heavily
involved in tolling projects in the state. Both companies have
seats on the foundation steering committee.
The park is scheduled to open in late 2011.
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Thursday April 17, 2008 |