Report: TxDOT "out of control"
James Osborne, The Monitor
McALLEN - The Texas Department of
Transportation - responsible for most
highways and roads that drivers travel
each day - needs massive overhaul and
greater oversight, according to a report
set for release today.
"Many expressed
concerns that TxDOT was ‘out of
control,' advancing its own agenda
against objections from both the
Legislature and the public," read an
advanced copy of the Texas Sunset
Advisory Commission report, which The
Monitor obtained Monday.
"Significant changes are needed...
tweaking the status quo is simply not
enough."
TxDOT, one of 27 state agencies
undergoing the periodic Sunset review,
has faced continued criticism over how
it's handled its recent funding crisis,
as well as a recent and controversial
decision to halt new highway projects
across Texas.
The Legislature created the Sunset
commission in 1977 to identify and
eliminate waste, duplication, and
inefficiency in government agencies. In
most cases, agencies under Sunset review
are automatically abolished unless
legislation is enacted to continue them.
TxDOT's impact on the Rio Grande
Valley is particularly crucial now, as
the area rapidly grows and relies on
expanded highways and roads to prevent
projected traffic congestion and
gridlock. The Valley's hope for an
interstate project also largely rides on
state transportation policies.
The agency's endorsement of toll road
projects, like the Trans-Texas Corridor,
has drawn accusations that its
administrators' intent is to turn
highway construction over to the private
sector.
"They were putting toll roads where
no one wanted them," said Sunset
commission member state Sen. Juan "Chuy"
Hinojosa, D-McAllen, on Monday. "They
don't communicate, and they've been
pretty unresponsive to the Legislature."
TxDOT has attributed the bulk of its
projected $3.6 billion revenue shortfall
over the next seven years to cuts in
federal transportation funding.
But agency leaders have also conceded
they failed to forecast the drop in
revenue in adequate time and failed to
catch a $1.1 billion accounting error.
On Monday, TxDOT officials issued a
statement addressing the Sunset report.
"The confidence of the Legislature
and the public are very important to us.
We still have work to do, but we are
confident our ongoing efforts to improve
the transparency and accessibility of
TxDOT are making a positive impact,"
said agency spokesman Chris Lippincott.
TxDOT is scheduled to appear for a
hearing before the Sunset commission
July 15, and the agency's future is
expected to be of considerable interest
to the Legislature when it convenes in
January.
The report, on which Sunset staff
began work in September, calls a
legislative oversight transportation
committee to be created and for a
transportation commissioner to replace
the three-member Texas Transportation
Commission. Those and other changes
would be assessed in four years time, as
opposed to the standard 12-year span
between legislative reviews.
A spokeswoman for Gov. Rick Perry,
who appoints the five-member
transportation commission, said the
changes presented in the report would
not weaken the governor's role in TxDOT.
"The Legislature already has
oversight through the budget process,"
said Allison Castle. "The governor has
an extreme level of confidence in the
commissioners."
Hinojosa and other senate Democrats
have been critical of Perry's support of
public-private partnerships for toll
roads, like the one with Spanish
infrastructure giant Cintra, despite
considerable public objection to the
projects.
"Perry is pushing so hard he just
appoints commissioners who agree with
him 100 percent," Hinojosa said. "It
causes a lot of bad feelings."
Perry and others have argued toll
roads are Texas' best option to keep up
with the growing demand for new highways
in light of what is expected to be an
ongoing decrease in federal
transportation funding.
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