Press Releases and Newsletters2021-07-29T15:50:07+00:00

Press Releases and Newsletters

Mobility Fund Comparison-Governor/Senate/House

As we enter the final state budget negotiations I have created a chart to outline the different provisions of the Mobility Fund as proposed by the Governor, the Senate, and the House.  I have also done a letter you can send to your delegation encouraging them to include the Powell Bill Supplement, dedicated Interstate Maintenance funds, and an end to the transfer from the Highway Trust Fund to the General Fund. Lastly, if your city council and/or you MPO has not passed a resolution in support of the Mobility Fund we have one of those as well.

NC Board of Transportation Meeting 6.3.10 (Summary by Jim Humphrey, CDOT)

NC Board of Transportation Meeting 6.3.10 (Summary by Jim Humphrey, CDOT)

Secretary’s Remarks- Jim Trogden spoke of Mobility Funds, response to a Amtrak Train derailment in Mebane, expansion of mid-day train service between Raleigh and Charlotte, award of the contract for I-485 and the public event in Charlotte, more work to integrate NCTA into NCDOT (including plans to physically move them to NCDOT offices) and several other topics.

Legislative Update- Johanna Reese discussed the status of the Mobility Fund (same info which Julie White sent). All of NCDOT’s agency bills seem to be progressing nicely. Nina indicated she had heard some concern regarding a bill that would regulate bicycling on highways. She indicated the controversial part of the bill relates to a requirement that bicyclist move to single file “quickly” when a car approaches. It also does not allow bicyclist to ride more than 2 abreast. The bill number was not provided.

Transportation Intergovernmental Advisory Group- Jim Westmoreland provided an update regarding work which I think you are familiar with. Several subgroups have been formed to look at communication and education with local officials, future transportation funding strategy (reauthorization), reduce land use and transportation impacts (schools), census impact on MPO/RPO boundaries and coordination of TIGER II grants.

Art and Aesthetics on State Projects- Don Lee indicated a new policy was being developed. Art is typically free standing or on a structure. A DOT committee has been formed to develop the guidelines. There will likely be a submittal package required and a sponsor in local government or a local entity for any art structure. This will include a maintenance agreement. The draft guidelines will be published in June or July and distributed to an external advisory committee which will likely include local government officials.

Noise Barrier Aesthetics Update- Greg Smith provided an update. It appears that DOT is headed toward developing 3 or 4 types of wall finishes and 3 or 4 colors that can be selected during public involvement. They do plan to treat both sides of walls (which residents and business on the outside of the wall will appreciate) and plan to use more concrete columns/pillars and horizontal coping. Some on the board expressed concern over added cost compared to current practice. Greg assured them that the added cost was relatively small (about 5-10%). They had a good discussion regarding how noise walls affect the image of cities and the topic of gateways. Some on the board said if a city/town wanted something more than the standard wall, they would have to pay the cost. I did have a private discussion with Greg after the presentation and reinforced the need for flexibility particularly on gateway projects. I also suggested an advisory committee including local government be asked to review whatever is ultimately proposed. Another idea is to run the proposal thru the Complete Streets Committee. Greg seemed to appreciate my comments and I feel he will run whatever is proposed thru local folks at some time.

Ecosystem Enhancement Program- Bill Gilmore presented information regarding an interim budget. 84% of funds are geared toward restoration of wetlands..

I-95 Planning and Funding Report- Roberto Gonzales discussed the history and current status. The key aspect is work regarding potential tolling. They have found if tolling were implemented only at state borders, revenues would equal only 10% ($25m) of revenues that would be collected if the road were tolled thru-out the state ($250m). If tolls were implemented only at the borders, they could build about 1 mile of improvements per year. They are looking at tolling options that include all lanes and only new lanes. Another interesting aspect of the study is that they are working with FHWA to answer the question of how far from the toll road itself might money from tolls be spent to mitigate impacts of traffic that will divert from the interstate. The NCDOT continues to work with neighboring states, hold public input and expects to issue further results of their study later this year/early next year.

Work Program including STIP- Jim Trogden asked that this subject be delayed until next meeting. He said they had not been able to discuss loop schedules with affected areas.

Cash Model- Mark Foster presented info on a cash model which NCDOT utilizes to manage/optimize funds. Interestingly, NCDOT is the only state agency allowed to cash flow their business (SB 1005).

Data Integration Model- Victor Barbour provided information on an internal project begun in 2008 and finished in 2010 to integrate data previously contained in separate divisions. Although the info is used in many ways, one use is to allow managers (primarily) and employees to monitor their success in meeting performance targets. He showed a map of the state with counties shown in different colors indicating those above and below goals for crash rates. He also indicated how the same data may be obtained in graphical and tabular forms. You may wish to have your performance monitoring and IT folks call Victor to arrange a demonstration.

Low Impact Bridges- Lacy Love presented info on the NCDOT’s work to accelerate replacement/repair of bridges. They have done a lot of work with partner agencies to develop check lists for environmental screening, developed standard bridge plans and make sure scope creep does not occur to enable them to replace bridges in as little as 1 year. Bridge replacements that qualify are very simple and minimize damage to the environment (for instance, no detour bridge on site).

Next Meeting in Kinston- The board decided to have their next meeting in Kinston. They feel having the meeting in eastern NC will permit them to see important projects in that part of the state and talk to local officials. My impression is that most meetings will continue to be in Raleigh…and that they will occasionally travel east and west.

I hope this info is beneficial. If you have questions feel free to email me or call me at 704-351-5850.

Jim Humphrey

Local officials please mobility fund in N.C. budget draft (Durham Herald Sun)

Local officials please mobility fund in N.C. budget draft (Durham Herald Sun)

DURHAM — Local officials are pleased that N.C. House members included in their draft of the state’s fiscal 2010-11 budget a version of the “mobility fund” Gov. Beverly Perdue wants to set up to underwrite major road and transit projects.

House members would seed the fund with $160 million over the coming four fiscal years, drawing it in part from an existing and so-far untapped subsidy for toll-road construction.

As Perdue asked, they’ve assigned first dibs on the money to the planned replacement of Interstate 85’s Yadkin River bridge at the border of Rowan and Davidson counties. But the House didn’t go along with Perdue’s request for vehicle-fee increases to help pay for it.

Local officials were happy because the budget bill includes a provision that says that once the N.C. Department of Transportation finishes the Yadkin bridge, major transit projects that would qualify for state construction subsidies should receive preferential consideration for a share of the fund.

Especially with that stipulation, “it’s encouraging it’s back in,” said Mayor Bill Bell, who said he has asked city administrators to pass the word to Durham’s legislative delegation that he’d like to see the mobility fund receive “strong consideration” as the budget moves to a House/Senate conference.

Bell, who chairs the N.C. Metropolitan Mayors Coalition, added that he and other city-government leaders around the state also want legislators to get behind Perdue’s request for mobility-fund earmarks for repairs to interstates and in-town roads.

Lobbying is necessary because the N.C. Senate’s initial draft of the budget didn’t include the mobility fund. Bell’s group and business interests have been helping Perdue and DOT push for the measure.

Triangle Transit General Manager David King joined Bell in praising the House decision.

“It’s a great thing, but not just for transit,” King said, noting that the key feature of Perdue’s initiative is that the new fund would bypass the “equity formula” that has divvied up road money among urban and rural regions since the late 1980s.

Critics of the formula say it has shortchanged congestion-plagued urban areas, while making it all but impossible for DOT to finance major, high-cost initiatives like the Yadkin bridge replacement in rural areas without shutting down other transportation projects in them for several years.

“The equity formula was a very noble attempt to make sure everybody felt they were getting their fair share,” King said. “But there are roads and projects that supercede everything.”

The Yadkin bridge — a key link on the highway that connects Washington, D.C., with Atlanta — had become the poster child for the equity formula’s deficiencies, he said.

It’s “obviously a high-priority project,” King said. “The inability to do that within the equity formula is just jarring in this day and age.”

But the House’s move didn’t come without controversy. Supporters of the mobility fund had to fend off an amendment by state Rep. Ric Killian, R-Mecklenburg, that would have shut it down after completion of the Yadkin bridge or on July 1, 2014, whichever came first.

The Killian amendment fell by a vote of 81-34 against. All but two of the Democrats who voted wanted to keep the fund going post-Yadkin. Republicans were split. Most lined up behind Killian, but House Minority Leader Paul Stam, D-Wake, and 17 other GOP members joined Democrats in voting against establishing a sunset date for the fund.

By Ray Gronberg

[email protected]; 419-6648

New Report Examines Gasoline Tax Proposals in Various States (AASHTO)

New Report Examines Gasoline Tax Proposals in Various States (AASHTO)

The success or failure of state-level plans to increase gas taxes can be tied to how the media covers those proposals, concludes a recently released report from the University of Vermont Transportation Research Center. The report examines six states — Idaho, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Hampshire, Oregon, and Vermont — where lawmakers debated raising gas taxes between 2006 and 2009 to close infrastructure gaps.

Those proposed increases were approved by the state legislatures in Minnesota in 2008, and Vermont and Oregon in 2009. In Idaho and Massachusetts, governor-proposed increases were rejected by lawmakers. The New Hampshire State Senate voted down a measure to increase the gas tax that had been approved by that state’s House of Representatives.

“Clearly, there are many possible explanations for the success and failure of gasoline tax increases at the state level,” acknowledges the report. “In each state, the details of the policy debate, the relationships between political parties and policy actors, and the overall context differ.”

Nonetheless, the report does draw on news coverage of those proposals in the local media as well as Associated Press wire service reports to find at least some clues to the ultimate policy outcomes. States such as Minnesota and Vermont, as outlined in the report, proved successful in enacting gas tax increases due to the huge emphasis on phrases like “crumbling infrastructure” in news reports. That imagery of aging and crumbling infrastructure, the report notes, proved especially resonant among lawmakers and the public.

Oregon, the report underscores, proved similarly successful in pushing through an increase because of the focus on economic progress. “Policymakers in the legislature and executive branch consistently emphasized the link between gas-tax increases and job creation,” according to the report.

The gas tax increase proposals fared less well in states like Idaho and Massachusetts, the report suggests, because the stress was on long-term transportation budget gaps and financing mechanisms rather than more evocative phrases. “In both states, the debate in the news discourse became about transportation funding, not the deteriorating system,” according to the report. “In Massachusetts, the debate became particularly complicated because of competing revenue raising proposals and legislative and executive branch initiatives to restructure the state transportation agencies.”

These case studies of media coverage and proposed gas tax increases, the report indicates, might also hold valuable lessons with respect to the ongoing debate over the federal surface transportation reauthorization. “The data suggest that in the states where the news discourse emphasized either crumbling infrastructure or economic progress there was a corresponding success in the policy domain for pro-gas-tax policy-makers,” the report concludes.

A copy of this 21-page report, “Gasoline Taxes: An Examination of News Media Discourse Related to Gas Tax Funding in Six States,” is available at http://tinyurl.com/UVTRC-Report.

House budget would start Perdue’s Mobility Fund with $70M (News and Observer)

House budget would start Perdue’s Mobility Fund with $70M (News and Observer)

The 2011 budget approved by the House this morning provides $70 million to start up the N.C. Mobility Fund that Gov. Bev Perdue wants for some big statewide transportation projects that, with one exception, have not been named.

This will be one of the areas for negotiation with the Senate, which did not include the Mobility Fund in its budget proposal.

It isn’t new money, as Perdue had proposed (she wanted $74.6 million in DMV fee hikes). It’s all diverted from the Highway Trust Fund via two routes:

* a $31 million slice of the yearly transfer from the Highway Trust Fund to the General Fund. The legislature has been reducing this transfer by chipping away chunks to cover revenue gaps on turnpike projects — the expected shortfall in toll collections needed to cover the full project costs.

The House budget leaves $40 million remaining in this shift to the general fund. In FY 2012 it proposes to reduce that further to $26 million by reserving an additional $14 million a year for the Mobility Fund.

* $39 million in gap funding unspent by the N.C. Turnpike Authority — it had been
earmarked to help pay for two toll projects that weren’t ready to get
started this year.

Why not simply leave this money in the good old Highway Trust Fund? Because it would be subject to the equity formula there, which distributes the cash according to geography and population numbers. The Mobility Fund is not subject to the equity formula, so it’s OK to spend a lot of money in one county without robbing other projects nearby.

Legislators don’t appear ready to change or kill the equity formula, but maybe they’re ready to acknowledge that it has prevented the state from addressing some of its biggest transportation needs.

How will the money be spent? Every time somebody talks about the Mobility Fund, starting with Perdue’s first mention (here’s the official version from her NCDOT) and continuing through variations in the House, there’s a different list of priorities.

Everybody agrees that the first share will go for widening Interstate 85 near the Yadkin River bridge (which has languished because of equity formula dynamics). There have been proposals to earmark some of the loot for interstate maintenance, for city streets and other needs.

The new House budget prefers an open-ended approach. After I-85 is fixed at the Yadkin bridge, it says, there would be lots of local and statewide consulting involved in selecting transportation projects “of statewide and regional significance that relieve congestion and enhance mobility across all modes of transportation.”

In other words, almost anything could qualify for this modest pot of money. It’ll be good to fix that stretch of I-85. After that, it’s hard to get excited.

Submitted by BruceSiceloff on 06/04/2010 – 14:43

Mass. launches green transportation initiative (Bloomberg Business Week)

Mass. launches green transportation initiative (Bloomberg Business Week)

The Massachusetts Department of Transportation is stepping up its efforts to go green.

Transportation Secretary Jeffrey Mullan announced Wednesday the “GreenDOT” campaign aimed at reducing greenhouse gas emissions, promoting healthy transportation alternatives and supporting smart growth development.

Under GreenDOT, the transportation department will incorporate sustainability into all of its activities, from strategic planning to project design and construction.

Highway expansion will be balanced with efforts to promote public transit, walking and bicycling. The state will also buy more efficient fleet vehicles and take advantage of renewable power.

Energy and Environmental Affairs Secretary Ian Bowles says it’s a long-term project “and this marks a transition.”

North Carolina Turnpike Authority merges into N.C. Department of Transportation

North Carolina Turnpike Authority merges into N.C. Department of Transportation

Call it the government version of a merger: The staff of the North Carolina Turnpike Authority got new bosses on June 1 as their integration into the North Carolina Department of Transportation kicked into a higher gear.

The turnpike, which is responsible for building toll roads in the state, was created as an independent agency in 2002. But Gov. Beverly Perdue decided to roll the authority into NCDOT last year.

As part of that decision, Executive Director David Joyner already had been reporting to NCDOT Chief Operating Officer Jim Trogdon. But NCDOT announced at its monthly meeting this week that the rest of the authority’s senior staff will now report directly to executive staff within the department instead of having their own separate reporting structure.

“This is just the next step to further integrate them,” says NCDOT spokesman Ted Vaden.

Despite the changes, the authority will continue to have a board, which will act in an advisory capacity and possibly could have other roles as well. Joyner also remains the executive director of the authority, which will operate as a unit of NCDOT.

The authority, which employs 23 people, currently is housed in office space on Glenwood Avenue, but Vaden says it will be moved to the Transportation Building in downtown Raleigh within several months.

Thursday, June 3, 2010, 2:25pm EDT | Modified: Thursday, June 3, 2010, 4:43pm

Triangle Business Journal – by Chris Baysden

SB1136: Regulate Towing in Cities Alert

SB1136: AN ACT TO STRENGTHEN THE REGULATION OF THE TOWING OF VEHICLES FROM PRIVATE LOTS IN CERTAIN COUNTIES AND CITIES, AS RECOMMENDED BY THE JOINT LEGISLATIVE TRANSPORTATION OVERSIGHT COMMITTEE.

The City of Charlotte has contacted Sen. Rucho, the bill sponsor, with concerns about this bill. See text of letter below. And suggested addition to the bill.

Senator Rucho,

Thank you for the opportunity to discuss SB 1136 earlier this week. As we discussed the City is concerned that the language in section (a2) of SB 1136 would prohibit the City from setting tow rates. The City has set these rates since 2003 in response to incidents where vehicle owners were charged exorbitant rates to get their vehicles back.

Attached you will find language suggested by the Police Department for the City to maintain the privilege to set the two rates. The language also clarifies that provisions of the City ordinance that may in the future be in conflict with the statute can be maintained and modified on a periodic basis.

I will stop by your office on Tuesday to discuss further. If in the meantime, you have any questions please call me at my office at 704.336.2009 or on my cell phone at 704.408.7393.

Thank you and have a good weekend.

Dana Fenton

(d) This section is not intended to preempt the ability of a city or county mentioned above to regulate by ordinance for the removal of unauthorized vehicles from private lots or for the establishment of a reasonable towing fee for services rendered.

Mobility Fund Update 5.3.2010

The House Budget Bill does include the Mobility Fund. Below is a summary of what is in the Mobility Fund, and what is not.

Funds going into the Mobility Fund:
$39 million in GAP funds that are likely to be unspent FY 2009-10
$31 million from Highway Trust Fund transfer to the General Fund in FY2011-12
$45 million from Highway Trust Fund transfer to the General Fund in FY2012-13
$45 million from Highway Trust Fund transfer to the General Fund in FY2013-14 (and for future years)

This leaves $25.5 million to be transferred from the HTF to the GF for future years and $18 million transferred from the Highway Fund to the General Fund for future years. (It is the Governor and NCDOT’s desire to have the remaining funds currently transferred from the HTF and HF to the GF deposited into the Mobility Fund.)

The YRB project will consume all the Mobility Fund dollars until mid FY2013-14. The bill has a stakeholder process to develop the project prioritization process for future Fund projects. The bill also gives preferential consideration to projects qualified to receive state grants from the Congestion Relief and Intermodal Transportation Fund.

The Governor’s provision to allocate 6.5% of the Mobility Fund each year to Powell Bill is not in the House bill. Neither is the dedicated $30 million each year for Interstate Maintenance.

The budget bill next goes to conference committee where the House and Senate negotiate a final compromise bill. The Mobility Fund was not in the Senate Budget, so the issue is in contention and may or may not be in the final compromise budget bill.  The Governor, NCDOT, the League, and the Metro Mayors are also working to try to get the Powell Bill and Interstate Maintenance provisions into the budget bill during the conference process.

States find road and bridge money hard to come by (Stateline)

States find road and bridge money hard to come by (Stateline)

By Daniel C. Vock, Stateline Staff Writer

This is the third in a series of stories looking at actions taken in state legislatures this year.

South Dakota Transportation Secretary Darin Bergquist delivered grim news to lawmakers last summer: Money to fix and build roads was dwindling, and the situation was getting worse.

The state’s main sources of money for road projects — taxes on gasoline and car sales — were both slipping. Meanwhile, the cost of actually building and maintaining the roads was going up, because prices were increasing on raw materials, from de-icing liquid to asphalt and concrete. What’s worse, delaying fixes only made the repairs more expensive. Letting a road deteriorate from excellent condition to fair condition makes it three times as costly to fix.

Faced with those sobering facts, legislators studying the issue recommended raising $250 million for transportation over five years by increasing the state’s gas tax, hiking vehicle registration fees and increasing the tax on vehicle sales. Republican state Representative Shantel Krebs, who headed the study committee, saw the proposal as a good investment. “I can’t see, as a legislative leader, making my taxpayers pay more because we didn’t have the political will to take care of it in the short term,” she says.

But come spring, the plan fell flat. A Senate panel blocked it, because senators didn’t want to raise taxes in the middle of a recession.

These are frustrating times to try to build roads, bridges and other transportation infrastructure, as the episode in South Dakota shows. But skittish state legislators are only a small part of the problem, eclipsed by the larger forces of the economic slowdown and congressional inaction.

The result is that, three years after a fatal bridge collapse in Minneapolis focused the public’s attention on transportation infrastructure, states increasingly are trying just to keep up existing roads and bridges instead of building new ones or rebuilding old ones.

Three years after a fatal bridge collapse in Minneapolis focused the public’s attention on transportation infrastructure, states are increasingly trying just to keep up existing roads and bridges instead of building new ones.

Desperately seeking funds

Only a few states this year came up with new money to spend on transportation projects.

In fact, says Jim Reed, a transportation expert at the National Conference of State Legislatures, no state this year has increased its gasoline tax, a traditional source of transportation money. Even last year, when states were already in the throes of the current budget crisis, just a handful hiked their gas taxes.

One of the most widely discussed ideas to bring in transportation dollars is to erect toll booths along state borders, in an effort to get out-of-state motorists to pay for the upkeep of interstate highways. Connecticut, New Hampshire and Pennsylvania all have considered the concept, but none has gone forward with it.

First-year Virginia Governor Bob McDonnell, though, fulfilled a campaign pledge by asking federal officials for permission to collect tolls from vehicles coming into Virginia from North Carolina along I-95, the interstate that runs from Maine to Florida. He says Virginia could bring in between $30 million and $60 million per year, allowing it to issue $1 billion of bonds to improve the highway. Recently, McDonnell said that he had talked to North Carolina Governor Bev Perdue about the proposal, and that her state is considering tolls along the Virginia border, too.

Rhode Island legislators are exploring a different tactic: Charging drivers for the number of miles they log rather than the amount of gasoline they buy. Last week, the Rhode Island Senate called for a study of the so-called “vehicle miles traveled tax,” a concept that the state of Oregon also has explored.

Other states have been pondering a variety of ways to raise more money for transportation. In Georgia, residents in each of 12 regions will vote in two years on a one-cent sales tax hike for transportation. West Virginia legislators, meanwhile, are asking counties to take on a greater role in building roads, a task left largely to state government there since the Great Depression.

Kansas, recently cited for having the best roads in the country, approved an $8.2 billion transportation plan for the next decade, paid for with new bonding, a hike in vehicle fees and a share of a new state sales tax that takes effect in July. This year’s transportation bill in Vermont is the largest in state history, with more than one-sixth of the $595 million package going toward bridge repair. The package uses federal stimulus money and revenues from a gas tax hike approved last year.

Stuck in federal limbo

Casting a pall over almost all transportation decisions in the states is uncertainty from Congress. Since the passage of the stimulus law last year, major transportation legislation has stalled in both chambers, mainly because there’s no agreement on how to pay for it.

The most immediate concern for states is the status of the Highway Trust Fund, the pot of money that states use to carry out the federal government’s road and mass-transit programs. States must put up a share of their own money to get the matching federal dollars.

Three times in the past two years, Congress has had to deposit more money into the trust fund account to keep it solvent. Simply put, the federal gas taxes and other revenue sources that go into the fund are not keeping up with expenses. Every time the trust fund comes close to going dry, state transportation agencies must deal with the prospect of not getting federal help for projects they have already started — no small worry since the federal government often pays 80 percent of the bills. This spring, Missouri delayed starting new projects for two months while a jobs creation bill, which included more money for the trust fund, languished in Washington.

Bergquist, South Dakota’s transportation chief, says the short-term fixes make planning difficult. It’s hard to tell local residents when a major project will be done without knowing when federal funding will arrive, he says. “And when you ultimately get your funding, it comes at the last minute, like it did last year. You haven’t had time to plan. You can’t necessarily use those funds on your highest priority because you’re reacting.”

Funding also is a major hurdle for renewing the federal government’s massive multi-year surface transportation plan, which expired last September. Congress agreed to keep the old plan going temporarily while lawmakers try to strike a deal on a replacement. Initial versions of that next bill suggest Congress may link funding to how well projects meet certain goals. The specifics about what those goals are and how they’re measured could significantly change the types of projects that the federal government approves. Highway advocates worry, for example, that a heavy emphasis on reducing greenhouse gases could stymie highway projects in favor of passenger rail.

Another wild card from Capitol Hill is the cap-and-trade bill to limit carbon dioxide emissions. A recently unveiled plan would tax petroleum products. But many transportation-related industries and advocates argue that not enough of the money would go toward transportation projects. They also worry that once a new tax is placed on oil-related products, it would be harder for Congress to raise the federal gas tax to replenish the Highway Trust Fund.

Making do

When Missouri transportation officials unveiled their five-year plan this spring, it was a marked departure from recent years. Money from road-construction bonds approved five years ago finally ran out, and additional help from the federal stimulus package will expire soon. The state’s average budget for transportation projects will drop from $1.25 billion over the past five years to just $500 million in the next five. So Missouri’s plan included no new construction projects.

The Missouri Department of Transportation is trying to reduce costs and cut its payroll, says Jorma Duran, an agency spokesperson. The cutbacks mean the agency won’t be able to make major safety improvements to roads, or build more of them to relieve traffic congestion.

The situation in Missouri is typical. In fact, the federal stimulus package helped push many states toward focusing on simple maintenance. The influx of cash was designed to be spent quickly, and maintenance projects can be completed more quickly than major upgrades or brand-new construction. “The stimulus helped, but it was a drop in the bucket,” says Sean Slone, a transportation analyst at the Council of State Governments.

Jay Hansen, of the National Asphalt Pavement Association, says state transportation departments have become very conservative in their planning because of uncertainty over congressional action and the end of the recession. Orders for asphalt have declined by 35 percent since the recession began, declining to levels not seen since the late 1980s. Orders have started to level out, but after the bulk of stimulus money is spent this summer, he says, “your guess is as good as mine.”

In South Dakota, the shortage of funds means the Department of Transportation remains in “preservation mode,” Bergquist says. He says the public won’t notice anything immediate or drastic, but services will be scaled back. More ditches along highways will go unmowed and new construction will be put off.

But in the northeast corner of the state, which has been ravaged by floods for the past two years, the lack of funding could pose an even bigger problem for local governments. Hundreds of miles of roads once topped with asphalt are now “muck,” Bergquist says, and the counties don’t have money to rebuild them. The counties are patching the roads, sometimes with gravel, to make sure emergency crews can get through, but it will be years before the roads can be rebuilt.

Bergquist stresses that the pressures his department faces are similar to those confronted in state transportation agencies around the country. “We are trying to juggle a lot of balls that we’re responsible for and keep them all in the air,” he says. “At some point, one or more of those balls is going to have to drop. But we’re not to that point yet.”
— Contact Daniel C. Vock at [email protected]

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 02, 2010

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