Texas DOT Slammed by Sunset Panel
Texas legislative committee recommends harsh reforms
after state transportation department over deceptive
toll road marketing effort.
6/4/2008
theNewspaper
The Texas state legislature's Sunset Advisory Commission
released a report yesterday slamming the Texas
Department of Transportation (TxDOT) and its high-level
focus on toll financing. In a blistering 157-page
report, the commission condemned the agency's attitude
and argued for shakeup in the way the department does
business.
"Early concerns about the department's approach to toll
roads and its interest in public-private partnerships
have become a deep-seated distrust of TxDOT's motives
and direction, as reflected in the legislature's
insistent drive to recapture policy ground lost to the
department," the report explained. "Many expressed
concerns that TxDOT was 'out of control,' advancing its
own agenda against objections of both the legislature
and the public."
Texas law requires that each state governmental agency
come before the Sunset Advisory Commission every twelve
years to outline how it is serving the public good. An
agency unable to come up with an explanation that
convinces lawmakers to pass legislation to continue its
existence is automatically closed. This threat gives the
sunset commission the persuasive authority needed to
force bureaucracies to adopt proposed reforms. In
TxDOT's case, the commission insisted that the agency
only receive a four-year extension of operations so that
the commission could maintain more leverage to ensure
operational changes are made.
Specifically, the sunset commission wants major policy
decisions to be made by elected lawmakers, not TxDOT. It
would replace the Texas Transportation Commission with a
single commissioner responsible for TxDOT oversight,
saving $488,856 per year. The sunset commission also
insisted that TxDOT provide a regularly updated
transportation plan so that lawmakers and the public
could have a clear understanding of the agency's goals
and project selection process. TxDOT will also have to
provide "more meaningful public involvement efforts
agency-wide." The report also included a long list of
minor recommendations such as the elimination of a
requirement to advertise contracting opportunities in
print newspapers. This change alone would save $950,000
a year.
The sunset report explained that one of the primary
reasons that the public and legislature distrusted TxDOT
was the agency's November 2007 announcement that it was
out of money and would cut back on freeway construction
and maintenance by $1.1 billion. TxDOT made this a key
selling point for its toll road agenda, but the
commission noted that TxDOT officials had known a full
month earlier the $1.1 billion shortfall was the result
of an accounting error. Even so, the agency continued
publishing the shortfall figure until a February 2008
state Senate Transportation Committee hearing.
"Only after this hearing and at the direction of the
committees did TxDOT revise its discussion points to
include an explanation of the error as a factor
contributing to the shortfall. However, significant
damage had been done," the report stated. "The reaction
of several key members of the legislature indicated
serious concerns regarding TxDOT's financial
operations."
The Sunset Advisory Commission will hold a hearing on
its TxDOT findings on July 15. The full sunset report is
available in a 1.8mb PDF file at the source link below.
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