Battle between Federal Highway Admin. & TX legislature makes national news!

Link to article here. It’s nothing short of stunning that our President, a Texan, is treating his state this way. To have to have one of our senators, Kay Bailey Hutchison, send a letter asking the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) to BACK OFF from its illegal lobbying, is an abomination! This President and this Governor don’t seem to care one flip about representing the will of the people. We’re all supposed to let the elite Rockefeller Republicans rule and get out of the way while they “marry” (as James Ray of FHWA recently stated) our government with corporations. If these guys want a showdown, a showdown they will get. I’m quite confident Texans aren’t going to take this top-down, elitist cronyism where everything in America is for sale to the highest bidder (be it highways, ports, airports, lotteries, power plants) any longer.

PREMEDITATED MERGER
Battle with feds brewing over ‘superhighway’
Texas legislators overwhelmingly pass bill blocking construction


Posted: May 4, 2007
By Jerome R. Corsi
© 2007 WorldNetDaily.com


A battle between Texas and the Bush administration is brewing over construction of the Trans-Texas Corridor after the state legislature passed a two-year moratorium. The Texas House passed HB1892 Wednesday after the Senate last week approved an earlier version of the moratorium on a project some critics see as part of a “NAFTA superhighway” system and ties with Canada and Mexico that threaten U.S. sovereignty. The bill has been sent to Gov. Rick Perry for signature by May 14, but it passed with veto-proof margins of 27-4 in the Senate and 139-1 in the House.

The Bush administration appears determined to fight the moratorium.

WND reported last week FHWA Chief Counsel James D. Ray wrote a four-page letter to Michael Behrens, executive director of the Texas Department of Transportation, threatening the loss of federal highway funds if the legislature were to pass a two-year moratorium of the public-private partnership financed by Cintra, an investment consortium in Spain.

WND previously has reported TTC-35, the nation’s first NAFTA superhighway, is a four-football-field wide car-truck-train-pipeline toll road the Texas Department of Transportation plans to build parallel to Interstate 35 from Laredo, Texas, to the Texas-Oklahoma border south of Oklahoma City.

TTC is a public-private-partnership heavily promoted on the FHWA website, largely because the corridor will be financed by Cintra, an investment consortium in Spain that will manage the toll road under a 50-year lease.

On Tuesday, Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchinson, R–Texas, wrote to the Federal Highway Administration objecting to a threatening letter the agency recently wrote the Texas Department of Transportation.

Hutchinson wrote J.Richard Capka, the FHWA administrator, charging that Ray’s letter “placed a cloud over current actions being taken in the Texas Legislature.”

Hutchinson further wrote that as “someone who has worked to increase Texas’ share of federal transportation dollars, I understand the need to make sure that Texas has all options to leverage funds.”

Hutchinson cautioned, “While the administration plays a valuable role in providing technical guidance and assistance for states considering legislation which may impact federal funds, there is a fine line between analysis and advocacy in those deliberations.”

Hutchinson invited Capka to take steps to remove the threatening impression caused by Ray’s letter.

In the looming battle, the Bush administration can expect to find an ally in Rep. Mike Krusee of Williamson County, Texas.

WND has confirmed a previous report that Ray’s letter was prompted by a request Krusee sent to FHWA asking for an opinion specifically on HB1892, the version of the moratorium that passed the Texas House.

WND also previously reported Krusee was a prime mover of the enabling legislation the Texas legislature passed paving the way for the TTC project. In November 2006, Krusee barely won re-election to the Texas legislature, after a campaign in which his support of TTC development was hotly contested.

In a scathing attack on Krusee, the Texas blog EyeonWilliamson.org posted charges that Krusee has pursued a private consulting contract to help consultant Wilbur Smith Associates, a transportation infrastructure consulting firm, shepherd a proposal through the Department of Transportation’s “Corridor of the Future” grant competition.

Wilbur Smith Associates proposes to build a new cross-country toll road along the Interstate 10. The Wilbur Smith proposal was designed to meet the “Corridor of the Future” emphasis on public-private partnerships of the type Krusee has pushed for years through the Texas legislature.

On Feb. 1, Secretary of Transportation Mary Peters announced that the Interstate-10 proposal was among the eight “Corridor of the Future” finalists.

Krusee was also invited Feb. 9 to speak at an invitation-only White House “Transportation Leadership Summit,” which EyeonWilliamson.org took to be “evidence of Krusee’s ever-increasing favor with the Bush administration.

WND contacted Krusee’s office and asked a series of specific questions, including whether Krusee had a business relationship with Wilbur Smith Associates, as charged by EyeonWilliamson.org.

Instead of answering the specific questions, James Walpole, a spokesman for Krusee, e-mailed to WND a press release.

The statement affirmed Krusee had asked FHWA for an opinion on the moratorium bill

“Since I had questions about whether the tollway moratorium now passed by the Senate would jeopardize precious federal highway funding,” the press release read, “I asked the federal highway administration to give its opinion.”

WND also has reported the Texas ports of Houston and Corpus Christi are planning to accommodate megaships from China that will pass through an expanded Panama Canal. Both ports are working with the Texas Department of Transportation to connect with TTC projects for the Chinese containers to be transported inland.

Tollers admit HB 1892 will kill private toll contracts in TX

The Carona amendment added to the bill a week ago was the nail in the coffin. In a brilliant move by the Senator, he realized his stand alone omnibus bill had too many TxDOT goodies to get it passed (that’s one of the pitfalls of a compromise bill), so he worked with the authors and added the best provisions of it (that properly restrain CDAs). HB 1892 had a veto-proof backing, so it was the only way to get it past the Governor. The Carona Amendment also puts an end to ALL CDAs when the moratorium is lifted. With such a LOUD message from the grassroots and Legislature, the private operators will likely leave Texas for good. Hurray! As we’ve said before, Texas is the 5th largest economy in the world and we’ve been building our own roads for the last 50 years and we’ll continue to build our own roads for the next 50 years. Bye, bye, Cintra and private toll companies! Good riddance!

Link to Toll Roads News here.

Killer clause in Texas bill bans early termination refund based on future toll revenues
Toll Road News
May 2, 2007

There’s a little noticed killer clause in concession freeze bills voted out of the Texas legislature Wednesday (May 2) – a ban on refund formulas based on estimates of future toll revenue in case of early termination by the state – so-called termination for convenience.

The concession freeze bill HB1892 has continued to yo-yo back and forth between the Texas senate and house with many amendments being thrown into the bill in the past week. Only Wednesday afternoon did the two houses get identical bills passed, when by 139 to 1 the House passed a senate bill.

It is not clear many legislators noticed what is being described as a killer clause because it will block even the toll concessions supposedly exempted from the two year freeze, and would prevent resumption of concessions after the freeze. Legislators from the Dallas area spent many hours arguing to allow concessions in their area to proceed and the bill as passed Wednesday allows SH121, SH161, and several others to proceed.

However they won’t proceed because the bill contains a “Termination for convenience” clause which requires in the concession contract a formula for making an early termination payment to a concessionaire. That allows the compensation to be based on past investment expenditure by the concessionaire and an agreed rate of return on that investment, but prohibits the formula being related to prospective future toll revenues.

Prospective future revenues are the core value of a toll concession – at least the net revenues after operating costs. Concession bids are based on projected net revenues over the life of the concession so if a concession can be terminated at any time by the state without regard to future revenues lost by the termination there is no basis for a bid.

This is a killer clause.

Concessionaires won’t bid in Texas if that clause becomes law.

In the vote today the pioneer of toll concessions in Texas, house transportation committee chair Mike Krusee was the lone representative voting against HB1892 though several representatives abstained or were absent.

TERMINOLOGY: Texas legislators don’t use the term ‘toll concession.’ Instead they use the labored formulation of “a comprehensive development agreement under which a private participant receives the right to operate and collect revenue from a toll project.” Concessionaires are described as “private participants.”

HB1892 text including killer clause Sec 371.101 (b) (a):

SUBCHAPTER C. CONTRACT PROVISIONS
Sec. 371.101. TERMINATION FOR CONVENIENCE. (a) A toll
project entity having rulemaking authority by rule and a toll
project entity without rulemaking authority by official action
shall develop a formula for making termination payments to
terminate a comprehensive development agreement under which a
private participant receives the right to operate and collect
revenue from a toll project. A formula must calculate an estimated
amount of loss to the private participant as a result of the
termination for convenience that is based on investments,
expenditures, and rate of return associated with the project.
(b) A formula under Subsection (a) may not include an
estimate of future revenue from the project.

The full bill as passed is not yet available in a single document.

TOLLROADSnews 2007-05-03

Nevada cools to idea of private tolling

To our fellow Nevadans,

Take the advice of your fellow Texans. Organize, organize, organize, and hold their feet to the fire and YOU SHALL PREVAIL! Never give up, never listen to the naysayers. You’ll get discouraged and feel defeated at times thinking it’s an uphill battle against BIG MONEY and it’s impossible to win against their unlimited resources. BUT, you can…educating one voter at a time. The issue is so egregious, all you have to do is educate people and it ignites the fire on its own.

Link to article here.

Toll talk falters in Nevada
Landline Magazine
May 1, 2007

Despite being told that public-private partnerships could help the state cope with funding shortfalls to get needed road work done, Nevada state lawmakers haven’t warmed up to the scheme.Two bills are dead in the Assembly that sought to increase tolling options for the state. One bill – AB417 – would have authorized the Nevada Department of Transportation to enter into public-private partnerships. It also would have required that alternative routes be available for those who want to avoid paying to use the privatized routes.

Sponsored by Assemblyman Joe Hardy, R-Boulder City, the bill remained in the Assembly Transportation Committee at the deadline to advance to the chamber floor, effectively killing it for the year.

A related bill met the same fate. Sponsored by Assemblyman Kelvin Atkinson, D-Las Vegas, the bill – AB583 – would have allowed municipalities to set up toll road and bridges. It also required that alternative routes be available but it didn’t permit public-private partnerships.

A Senate bill also died that originally would have limited authorization to set up toll roads and bridges. To qualify, cities would need to have at least 10,000 residents while counties would be required to have at least 100,000 residents.

Local governments that qualify could partner with private groups to design, build and operate toll routes.

Sponsored by Sen. Dennis Nolan, R-Las Vegas, the bill – SB392 – was later changed to require a study on tolling projects. It was left in a Senate committee at the deadline to advance from the chamber.

Advocates for toll roads in the state got a boost recently from former U.S. House Majority Leader Dick Gephardt, who is a lobbyist for investment firm Goldman Sachs – the same outfit that pocketed $20 million a year ago for brokering the $3.85 billion deal to lease the Indiana Toll Road to a foreign group.

The now-retired congressman from Missouri made a recent stop in Carson City, NV, to discuss such partnerships and said that tolling would be better than increasing fuel taxes to pay for roads.

At a legislative hearing, Gephardt said the state might benefit from tolling trucks along Interstate 80 in northern Nevada and cars on freeways in Las Vegas. Privately-funded lanes on Interstate 15 linking Los Angeles and Las Vegas also might reduce congestion, the Las Vegas Review-Journal reported.

At a time when the state is trying to figure out how to make up for a nearly $4 billion shortfall in highway funding during the next eight years, Gephardt cautioned that pay-to-play routes should not be a “panacea” for all transportation funding problems.

Gov. Jim Gibbons has been lukewarm on tolls. He said he would oppose any toll plan that doesn’t include free alternate routes.

“I don’t favor making toll roads out of existing highways that people are already using,” Gibbons told the Review-Journal.

The governor said he might be willing to use bonds or surplus funds to pay for some road work. He has made it clear he’s against traditional funding methods that include tax or fee increases.

The governor’s stance on taxes is likely partially responsible for the removal of a provision from another bill to increase the state’s per-gallon tax on diesel and gasoline by 6 cents during the next two years.

The Senate Taxation Committee amended the bill – SB324 – that still includes provisions to increase vehicle registration fees paid by drivers through a reduction in depreciation allowances, a $20 increase in the fee for driver’s licenses, and putting sales taxes from motor vehicle sales and repairs to highways instead of the general fund.

Sponsored by Sen. Mike McGinness, R-Fallon, the bill has been forwarded to the Senate Finance Committee.

One effort that does have the governor’s backing would dedicate $170 million in state surplus revenue this year to the next phase of Interstate 15 in Las Vegas. The cash infusion would be used to extend improvements to I-15 from the “Spaghetti Bowl” interchange with Interstate 95 north to Craig Road to help relieve congestion.

The bill – AB544 – is in the Assembly Ways and Means Committee.

– By Keith Goble, state legislative editor

Senate votes to put TxDOT on a leash; passes last moratorium bill

IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Senate puts TxDOT on a leash in HB 1892

Last private toll moratorium passes 27-4

Austin, TX, Friday, April 27, 2007 – In yet another historic move in the Legislature, not only did the Senate vote to suspend several rules to take-up the last vehicle to pass a private toll moratorium, HB 1892, early but also senators amended the bill to put the Department of Transportation on a tighter leash during the moratorium period.Senator John Carona, Chair of the Senate Transportation and Homeland Security Committee, took key provisions from his omnibus transportation bill and added them to HB 1892. It puts a sunset on ALL Comprehensive Development Agreements (private toll contracts called CDAs) two years sooner, at 2009, and requires oversight on any CDAs not in the moratorium by the Attorney General, Legislative Budget Board, and the State Auditor’s office.It almost completely eliminates non-compete provisions, allows the State to buy-out the contracts, requires greater transparency, and more input from the public.“The Senate sent a clear, powerful message to this Governor. The PEOPLE of Texas and their representatives have spoken. A supermajority said ‘NO’ to TxDOT’s arrogance and power plays and has just placed what the public considers a rogue agency in a box. The Governor would be wise NOT to try and let them back out with a veto, since it’s clear it’ll be overturned,” says Terri Hall, Founder and Director of Texans Uniting for Reform and Freedom (TURF).

“Both chambers have overwhelmingly passed every version of the CDA moratorium in a total repudiation of the direction this Governor and his Transportation Commission is trying to take us. We don’t want to pay what amounts to extortion money through oppressively high tolls in the hands of foreign companies just to go to work. We don’t want the Trans Texas Corridor. We are tired of TxDOT’s bullying tactics, their flagrant push away from transportation to selling off our public highways to the highest bidder, and we’re tired of the secrecy and back room deals,” states Hall.

Senator Dan Patrick said it best, “There is a tremendous disconnect between the people and TxDOT. We couldn’t even get the Transportation Commission Chairman to sit down and meet with senators” (referring to Transportation Commission Chair Ric Williamson’s dodging tactics with Chairman Carona at the beginning of the session).

Senator Steve Ogden said taxpayers have a every right to expect two things: tolls as low as possible, and tolls to come off the roads when they’re paid for. Neither of which is a TxDOT goal. In fact, the opposite is true. Williamson actually chided the Senate Transportation Committee for trying to keep the tolls and gas tax as low as possible. He feels our highways are assets to increase the value of by selling them off to the highest bidder who then charges prohibitively high tolls. TxDOT and the Governor also freely admit the tolls are never coming off these roads. They plan to fund other road projects from them…so much for tolls being a user tax when motorists on one toll road are paying to build someone else a free road.
Senator Carona defended the bill and the provisions he added saying this bill “was not entered into hastily,” and chastised the Senate for continuing to allow another $1 billion to be diverted away from highways in this year’s budget, having failed to pass any bill to return those funds to transportation nor to raise some Cain and insist the House index the gas tax (all tax bills must originate in the House).

Senator Robert Nichols, ex-Transportation Commissioner, rallied his colleagues, quieted fears about some of the new provisions, and reminded them, “If we don’t pass this bill, we will NOT have another chance to pass a CDA moratorium this session.”

Thanks to the tireless efforts of an engaged grassroots movement across the state, and thanks to the many champions of their cause, they got the job done today. It’s a truly historic day in Texas!

Read more about effects on San Antonio toll projects here.

-30-

Businessweek: Public should be worried about push to private tolls

Link to article here.
Issue Date: MAY 7, 2007

COVER STORY
Businessweek
By Emily Thornton

Roads To Riches
Why investors are clamoring to take over America’s highways, bridges, and airports—and why the public should be nervous

podcast

COVER STORY PODCAST

Steve Hogan was in a bind. The executive director of Colorado’s Northwest Parkway Public Highway Authority had run up $416 million in debt to build the 10-mile toll road between north Denver and the Boulder Turnpike, and he was starting to worry about the high payments. So he tried to refinance, asking bankers in late 2005 to pitch investors on new, lower-interest-rate bonds. But none of the hundreds of investors canvassed was interested.

Then, one day last spring, Hogan got a letter from Morgan Stanley (MS ) that promised to solve all of his problems. The bank suggested Hogan could lease the road to a private investor and raise enough money to pay off the whole chunk of debt. Now Hogan, after being inundated with proposals, is in hot-and-heavy negotiations with a team of bidders from Portugal and Brazil. “We literally got responses from around the world,” he says.

In the past year, banks and private investment firms have fallen in love with public infrastructure. They’re smitten by the rich cash flows that roads, bridges, airports, parking garages, and shipping ports generate—and the monopolistic advantages that keep those cash flows as steady as a beating heart. Firms are so enamored, in fact, that they’re beginning to consider infrastructure a brand new asset class in itself.

With state and local leaders scrambling for cash to solve short-term fiscal problems, the conditions are ripe for an unprecedented burst of buying and selling. All told, some $100 billion worth of public property could change hands in the next two years, up from less than $7 billion over the past two years; a lease for the Pennsylvania Turnpike could go for more than $30 billion all by itself. “There’s a lot of value trapped in these assets,” says Mark Florian, head of North American infrastructure banking at Goldman, Sachs & Co (GS ).

There are some advantages to private control of roads, utilities, lotteries, parking garages, water systems, airports, and other properties. To pay for upkeep, private firms can raise rates at the tollbooth without fear of being penalized in the voting booth. Privateers are also freer to experiment with ideas like peak pricing, a market-based approach to relieving traffic jams. And governments are making use of the cash they’re pulling in—balancing budgets, retiring debt, investing in social programs, and on and on.

But are investors getting an even better deal? It’s a question with major policy implications as governments relinquish control of major public assets for years to come. The aggressive toll hikes embedded in deals all but guarantee pain for lower-income citizens—and enormous profits for the buyers. For example, the investors in the $3.8 billion deal for the Indiana Toll Road, struck in 2006, could break even in year 15 of the 75-year lease, on the way to reaping as much as $21 billion in profits, estimates Merrill Lynch & Co. (MER ) What’s more, some public interest groups complain that the revenue from the higher tolls inflicted on all citizens will benefit only a handful of private investors, not the commonweal (see BusinessWeek.com, 4/27/07, “A Golden Gate for Investors”).

There’s also reason to worry about the quality of service on deals that can span 100 years. The newly private toll roads are being managed well now, but owners could sell them to other parties that might not operate them as capably in the future. Already, the experience outside of toll roads has been mixed: The Atlanta city water system, for example, was so poorly managed by private owners that the government reclaimed it.

Such concerns weigh on the minds of public officials like Hogan. He intends to negotiate aggressively with corporate suitors and has decreed that the buyer must share future toll-hike revenues with the local governments that built the highway. But with the market for infrastructure still in its infancy, every deal is different. The ideal blend of up-front payment, toll hikes, and revenue sharing hasn’t been found.

FLOOD OF MONEY
The nascent market in roads and bridges in the U.S. follows the shift toward privatization in Europe and Australia that began with British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher in the 1980s. It took longer to develop in the U.S. because of the $383 billion municipal bond market, which has been an efficient source of capital for governments over the years.

But with the explosion of money flowing into private investments recently, fund managers have been exploring the fringes of the investing world in search of fresh opportunities. Now a slew of Wall Street firms—Goldman, Morgan Stanley, the Carlyle Group, Citigroup, and many others—is piling into infrastructure, following the lead of pioneers like Australia’s Macquarie Group. Rob Collins, head of infrastructure mergers and acquisitions at Morgan Stanley, estimates that 30 funds are being raised around the world that could wield as much as $500 billion in buying power for U.S. assets.

Many investors think of infrastructure investing as a natural extension of the private equity model, which is based on rich cash flows and lots of debt. But there are important differences. Private equity deals typically play out over 5 to 10 years; infrastructure deals run for decades. And the risk levels are vastly different. Infrastructure is ultra-low-risk because competition is limited by a host of forces that make it difficult to build, say, a rival toll road. With captive customers, the cash flows are virtually guaranteed. The only major variables are the initial prices paid, the amount of debt used for financing, and the pace and magnitude of toll hikes—easy things for Wall Street to model. “With each passing week, there are more parties expressing unsolicited interest in some kind of a financial transaction that will involve one of our assets directly or indirectly,” says Anthony R. Coscia, chairman of the Port Authority of New York & New Jersey.

Firms are even beginning to market infrastructure to investors as a separate asset class, safe like high-grade bonds but with stock market-like returns—and no correlation with either. The Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index has returned about 10% a year, counting dividends, since 1926. Bonds have returned about 5%. Firms say infrastructure will beat both, and without having to sweat out market dips along the way. That’s a huge selling point at a time when stock, bond, and commodity markets around the world are becoming increasingly interconnected.

Investors can’t get in fast enough. They recently deluged Goldman Sachs with $6.5 billion for its new infrastructure fund, more than twice the $3 billion it was seeking. “We’re using [infrastructure] as a fixed-income proxy,” says William R. Atwood, executive director of the Illinois State Board of Investment, who plans to invest $600 million to $650 million, or 5% of its portfolio, in infrastructure funds over the next three years. “We’re hoping to get 11% to 12% returns and lower risk.” Pension funds in particular like the long-term investment horizons, which match their funding needs well. Infrastructure “delivers similar yield expectations to high-yield bonds and real estate, with less risk,” says Cynthia F. Steer, chief research strategist at pension consulting firm Rogerscasey.

On the other side of the bargaining table from the investment firms sit struggling governments suddenly amenable to the idea of selling control of assets to solve short-term problems. The burden of maintaining roads, bridges, and other facilities, many built during the 1950s, is becoming difficult to bear. Federal, state, and local governments need to spend an estimated $155.5 billion improving highways and bridges in 2007, according to transportation officials, up 50% over the past 10 years. And that’s hardly the only obstacle they face. In 2006 alone, states increased their Medicaid spending by an estimated 7.7%, to $132 billion. And state and local governments could be on the hook for up to $1.5 trillion in retiree liabilities, estimates Credit Suisse. At the same time, politicians find it difficult to raise taxes. Chicago’s former chief financial officer, Dana R. Levenson, sums up the situation: “There is money to be had, and cities need money.” U.S. Representative Chaka Fattah, a Pennsylvania Democrat who is running for mayor of Philadelphia, proposes to privatize the Philadelphia International Airport and use the proceeds to fund poverty programs—a much easier sell than a tax increase.

The combination of eager sellers and hungry buyers is shaking loose public assets across the country. The 99-year lease of the Chicago Skyway that went for $1.8 billion in 2005 was the first major transaction. Last year came the Indiana deal. Now states and cities are exploring the sale of leases for the turnpikes in New Jersey and Pennsylvania, a toll road in Texas, Chicago Midway Airport, and several state lotteries. Suddenly politicians around the country are wondering how much cash they might be sitting on. Based on the going rate of about 40 times toll revenues, the iconic Golden Gate Bridge could probably fetch $3.4 billion were California interested in selling. The Brooklyn Bridge? If permission were granted by New York City to charge the same tolls as the George Washington Bridge, a private owner might shell out as much as $3.5 billion for it.

PAVEMENT PRICING
But there’s a downside to the quick cash: planned toll hikes that are usually quite aggressive. Chicago’s Skyway could see car tolls rise from $2 in 2005 to $5 by 2017. For some perspective, if a similar scheme were applied to the Pennsylvania Turnpike during its 67 years of existence, the toll for traveling from the Delaware River to the Ohio border would be as much as $553 now instead of $22.75. Macquarie, which teamed up with Spain’s Cintra to purchase the Chicago Skyway and the Indiana Toll Road, underscored the governmental trade-off during a presentation at the recent White House Surface Transportation Legislative Leadership Summit: “More Money or Lower Tolls.” In an extreme scenario, governments could begin to sell properties that aren’t tolled to private owners who will impose fees.

Of course, tolls won’t go to the moon if they result in dramatic reductions in traffic. For example, investment firm NW Financial Group estimates that if the Chicago Skyway pricing scheme were applied to New York’s Holland Tunnel over its 80 years, it would cost $185 to travel through it instead of the current $6. “No one will pay that much,” says Murray E. Bleach, president of Macquarie Holdings (USA) Inc. “It’s just not going to happen.”

Still, Indiana legislators became so alarmed by promised hikes that they changed the terms before the toll road lease was completed. The state set aside $60 million to pay the difference in tolls for up to two years or until the buyers install electronic tolling equipment. After that, the fee for cars with electronic toll cards will rise to $4.80 over the full 157 miles, while the fee for cars without the cards will soar to $8. After 2010, both rates will rise each year by 2%, the pace of inflation, or the rate of economic growth, whichever is highest.

The certainty of future toll hikes doesn’t jibe with the uncertainty of service quality. Assets sold now could change hands many times over the next 50 years, with each new buyer feeling increasing pressure to make the deal work financially. It’s hardly a stretch to imagine service suffering in such a scenario; already, the record in the U.S. has been spotty. In 2003 the city of Atlanta ended a lease of its water system after receiving complaints about everything from billing disputes to water-main breaks. The city wrestled with the owner, United Water Inc., over basics like the percentage of water meters it should monitor. Both parties acknowledge that the contract lacked specifics. In the end, “we didn’t believe we were getting performance,” says Robert Hunter, commissioner for Atlanta’s Dept. of Watershed Management. “I don’t believe the city will ever look at privatizing essential services again.” United Water says the contract wasn’t financially feasible because Atlanta’s water system was in worse shape than the city had represented.

A CHAMPION’S PERSPECTIVE
States are wrestling with other public policy issues, too. Bankers say New York could reap a combined $70 billion for long-term leases on a bunch of assets, including the state’s lottery, the Tappan Zee Bridge, and the New York State Thruway. New York state officials have looked into the option of leasing the lottery, which itself might command $35 billion—a sum that could substantially upgrade, say, New York’s higher education system. The downside? The state would probably have to remove constraints on the lottery’s marketing designed to discourage people from gambling more than they can afford. If the state insists on keeping the constraints in place, it could reduce the value of selling it.

Chicago’s experience shows the possibilities and the pitfalls of privatization. Former CFO Levenson has been one of the movement’s biggest champions. He was an architect of the Skyway deal, which kicked off the market. Then he sold control of parking garages to Morgan Stanley for $563 million. Next, he started shopping around a lease for Midway Airport that could fetch as much as $3 billion. And soon the city hopes to auction off rights to operate some recycling plants. Levenson dismisses critics who argue that he has dumped prized assets. “This is not like where a person goes in and buys a loaf of bread from a store and walks out with that loaf of bread,” he says. “Some entity, we expect, will make an offer to lease the Midway Airport for 75 to 99 years, and the following day I’m pretty sure it will still be there.”

Wearing a crisp suit and stylish eyeglasses, Levenson looks like the Wall Streeter he once was, working for Bank One Corp. and Bank of America Corp. (BAC ) before taking the Chicago city job in 2004. In April he returned to banking: As a managing director at the Royal Bank of Scotland Group (RBS ), he now beats the bushes for infrastructure deals. Levenson doesn’t understand how local governments can afford not to put public works up for sale. Thanks to the 99-year lease for the Skyway, Chicago has paid off its debt and handed over $100 million to social programs like Meals on Wheels. Plus, says Levenson, it’s earning as much in annual interest on the $500 million it has banked from the transaction as it used to earn from running the Skyway ($25 million).

In some ways, Levenson argues, the city still has control over the highway. The agreement with the new owners spells out guidelines in mind-numbing detail, dictating everything from how quickly potholes must be filled (24 hours) to how rapidly squirrel carcasses must be removed (8 hours). If Macquarie and Cintra violate those conditions, the city can take back the road.

So far, the buyers have strictly adhered to the rules. At 7 a.m. on a Wednesday in March, five workers begin another day at the Chicago Skyway’s Snow Command. On their to-do list are potholes to be checked and cracks to be sealed. Juan Rodriguez used to patrol the freeway for Chicago city. Today, he cruises the road for private owners. He discovers some potholes have grown unacceptably large because of salt that was spread the previous night. There’s some tire debris that must be removed, and a disabled vehicle holding up traffic.

A SMOOTH RIDE?
In the past, Rodriguez says, he had to write out a ticket for each problem, which would be added to a long list of chores. Addressing problems often took days, Rodriguez recalls. But by 10:25 a.m., all of this morning’s issues on the Skyway’s 7.8-mile stretch of pavement are resolved. “The new owners are taking the Skyway to a whole new level,” he says.

They’ve certainly spent money on improvements. The message “a clean workplace is a happy workplace” is scrawled on a whiteboard in a freshly painted and ventilated garage where workers meet. There’s electronic tolling, which didn’t exist before. A bunch of new lanes are under construction. The investments seem to be paying off: Since taking over two years ago, the Skyway’s operators estimate traffic has risen 5%.

It’s all encouraging, except that Chicago “probably could have gotten more without privatizing,” according to Dennis J. Enright, a principal and founder of NW Financial. His firm’s analysis shows that Chicago could have done a lot better by handling the whole deal itself. It could have raised tolls and sold tax-exempt municipal bonds backed by the scheduled hikes. That would have given the city the up-front cash it needed while preserving some of the income from the toll hikes. Instead, that money will go to Macquarie and Cintra.

Meanwhile, the higher tolls will take a big bite out of lower-income people’s wallets. “You have to ask yourself if you want roads that used to be considered a public service to be rationed by income class,” says Princeton University economics professor Uwe E. Reinhardt. Chicago says it hasn’t received any formal complaints from citizens, though two different drivers recently went to extremes to avoid tolls, says Skyway maintenance manager Michael S. Lowrey. When the new owners introduced free towing for broken-down vehicles, the drivers called the Skyway for help, claiming to be stranded. After workers hauled the vehicles past the tollbooths, they hopped in their cars and sped away.

For workers, the privatization wave has wrought many changes. Skyway toll takers used to be full-time city employees with rich benefits. Now most are part-time independent contractors without benefits. Brian Rainville, executive director of the Chicago Teamsters Joint Council 25, helps manage the union’s pension fund. When he listened to a recent pitch from a pension consultant about infrastructure funds, it sparked a realization: The returns he might generate for his pensioners could be canceled out by the union’s shrinking number of contributors. “It’s pretty obvious that it’s not sound fiscal policy for the [pension] fund to undercut the people it’s serving,” Rainville says.

Pushback against private investors is now playing out in different ways elsewhere. In Pennsylvania, the state turnpike commission is going head-to-head with private bidders for the right to operate the state’s 537-mile toll road. Pennsylvania desperately needs cash to repair its nearly 6,000 structurally deficient bridges. Some pundits expected Pennsylvania Governor Edward G. Rendell to propose hikes in gas taxes and other fees to fund the projects. But in December, Rendell unexpectedly announced plans to privatize the turnpike. Timothy J. Carson, vice-chairman of the commission, scrambled to submit an expression of interest for the turnpike to continue to run itself. His proposal is being judged against many others, including those from big Wall Street firms.

Carson isn’t dissuaded by arguments that investors are better qualified to run turnpikes profitably. “There’s no magic here,” he says. “These [deals] are largely driven by one factor: the permitted toll increases.” Carson says the state doesn’t need to hand over the turnpike to private owners. Historically, he says, the state wanted the turnpike to collect only enough money to break even. But it could just as easily adopt its own toll-hike schedule. The state could also charge tolls on more roads. In other words, the public could remain in control simply by changing the turnpike’s mission. That would ensure that the benefits of the toll hikes were spread throughout the populace, says Carson.

Pennsylvania’s isn’t the only turnpike authority exploring the possibility of bidding for roads. The North Texas Tollway Authority calculated in March that it would have valued a partially constructed 25-mile stretch of highway near Dallas 26% more than a private investor had bid. Now it’s considering making a formal bid. And on Apr. 11, the Texas House of Representatives passed an amendment by a vote of 134 to 5 to impose a two-year moratorium on privatizing state toll roads. “We need to put the brakes on these private toll contracts before we sign away half a century of future revenues,” said representative Lois W. Kolkhorst, who proposed the bill. A similar bill was passed in the state senate on Apr. 19.

With so much money at stake and so many options available to states, it’s impossible to know how the great infrastructure craze may play out. But this much is certain, says Pennsylvania’s Carson: “People are willing to pay more than they are currently being charged. The only question is to what extent you’re willing to take advantage of that.”

Click here to join a debate about private ownership of roads and bridges.

Thornton is as associate editor for BusinessWeek

FHWA: Public-Private Partnerships (PPPs) "marriage between commerce & public need"

Benito Mussolini once said that fascism is the marriage of the corporation with the State. Well, Jim Rey of the Federal Highway Administration essentially admitted this is the Bush Administration’s transportation policy in a nutshell. He said these PPPs to fund widespread toll roads is the “marriage between commerce (private entity) and a public need.”

See this article that compares “state capitalism” with socialism. Rey addressed the Trans Texas Corridor Advisory Committee today, and shared a boatload of other policy initiatives cloaked in a cheerleading session about aggressively pursuing the private sector to “solve” our transportation & congestion “crisis” by taking over our infrastructure.

He also stated “every time America has needed a solution, the private sector delivered.” Sounds an awful lot like “state capitalism” doesn’t it? Rey claimed “the days are numbered for the gas tax” claiming it will become obsolete, while also contradicting himself saying they’re using a hybrid model of gas taxes and tolls to fund infrastructure. First of all, even if every car in America switched to a new alternative fuel, guess what? Congress would be certain to tax it! Remember Reagan’s famous quote: “[G]overnment’s view of the economy could be summed up in a few short phrases: If it moves, tax it. If it keeps moving, regulate it. And if it stops moving, subsidize it.” See article on the taxing of alt fuels here.

GOVERNMENT CONTROL OF YOUR MOVEMENT

Rey also said the problem with the gas tax is that it “allows” people to access their roads (these are the taxpayers roads, remember) freely, without concern for congestion or peak travel models. He opined that 40% of those on the road in peak hours are making discretionary trips, not going to work. While all of this may be true and can be a cause of congestion, we don’t need BIG Daddy government coming in and charging us all a “congestion tax” to control when and how we access our PUBLIC highways! Congestion is a deterrent in and of itself. Most people can change the the time they travel or take a different route if they don’t want to sit in traffic. We should be encouraging employers to allow such flexibility and even telecommuting rather than hold commuters hostage to a foreign company or impose prohibitive taxes to go to work.
TWO LOW OR NO COST SOLUTIONS!

He overlooked (two advisory board members brought these issues up as causes of congestion) then minimized two things that EVERY department of transportation can do right now TODAY with little or no cost to vastly improve congestion without selling off our infrastructure to private companies: implement an “incident management” program (to clear traffic accidents quickly) and mitigate the effects of highway construction (TxDOT projects can take years; they don’t maximize traffic flow during construction, etc.). In fact, the FHWA’s own stats show that the TOP 3 reaons for congestion have NOTHING to do with the amount of cars on the road. They are weather, accidents, and ROAD CONSTRUCTION.

We’ve pointed this out for several years now, but TxDOT hasn’t done a thing to improve either. In fact, if all this private money allows them to start a glut of highway projects all at once as they say is their goal, our whole STATE will be one big ORANGE CONE!
DON’T DRINK THE KOOL-AID!

He shared a host of such goodies…our Federal Highway Administration is aggressively pursuing a marriage between the corporation and the State. They’re taking away our freedom of movement, and this ought to wake-up EVERY American to stand up to such oppressive usurpation and STOP it! How ‘but the most simple solution of all: have government, especially TxDOT, learn to live within its means, cut the tremendous waste (Mr. Rey oversees 50 attorneys at the FHWA alone, what do we need 50 attorneys in the highway administration for? CUT THE WASTE!) and misuse of the tax dollars we already give them (like diverting it to non-transportation uses), and if anything, increase the gas tax rather than sell our infrastructure to foreign companies like third world countries do.

Please refrain from drinking such short-sighted and foolish Kool-Aid! It is hazardous to your FREEDOM!

MOVE QUICKLY TO PROTECT 1604!

While we’re grateful Senator Wentworth offered an amendment to protect 281 in the stand alone moratorium bill, 1604 is still at risk, depending on how TxDOT interprets the amendment. While we believe both projects would be not be allowed to fall into the hands of foreign companies (through a private toll contract called, CDA), we do NOT want to leave ANYTHING open to interpretation by TxDOT! The bill most likely to get to the Governor’s desk, HB 1892, will come before the Senate this week.

ACTION ALERT!
CALL OUR SENATORS and make sure they attach the Truitt amendment (the language that passed the House) to HB 1892. Simply say:

“We want BOTH 281 AND 1604 in the moratorium. Make sure the Truitt amendment gets attached to HB 1892. We do not want anything to be left open to interpretation by TxDOT!”

Call the Capitol switchboard: (512) 463-4630 and/or email. Calling is best due to the tight timeline, email may not get read in time…

jeff.wentworth@senate.state.tx.us
judith.zaffirini@senate.state.tx.us
leticia.vandeputte@senate.state.tx.us
carlos.uresti@senate.state.tx.us

The battle isn’t over until the RIGHT bills are amended with the RIGHT language and until we get it to the Governor’s desk in time!

Our Editorial in Express-News: Toll deals will sell us out

Link to Express-News version here. This is the first editorial printed under our new statewide non-profit group, Texans Uniting for Reform and Freedom (TURF). Check it out at www.TexasTURF.org. Compare this editorial with the version originally submitted. It’s much harder hitting and has exact quotes from Cintra about no alternative routes. Read it for yourself here.

Commentary: Toll road deals merit scrutiny
04/22/2007
By Terri Hall
Wonder why there is all the fuss over toll roads? Well, we’re not talking about traditional toll projects.

Gov. Rick Perry and his Transportation Commission are pushing private toll road deals that limit free routes and allow the private operator to charge high tolls.

As ex-Transportation Commissioner Sen. Robert Nichols, a stickler for details and the author of a bill to halt comprehensive development agreements, or CDAs, has noted, the devil is in the details.

These private toll contracts include noncompete agreements like Cintra’s. There will be no improvements made to existing roads or new free routes built within a certain radius of the toll road. Doing so would compete with or reduce toll revenues, and a private company simply won’t allow that.

The Texas Department of Transportation promises toll rates of 12 cents to 15 cents a mile, but the reality has been 44 cents up to $1.50 per mile on similar projects that just opened in Austin. When TxDOT has admitted it costs 11 cents to collect the tolls, it can’t possibly cover the operation or maintenance of that road with 12-cent to 15-cent tolls, much less pay the private toll operator its guaranteed 12 percent profit.

In fact, TxDOT’s mantra is that the private company will charge “market rate,” which essentially means tolls without limit since there will be few, if any, alternatives. Bottom line: Using CDA private toll contracts is the most expensive option for motorists. Yet the governor and his cronies claim they’re doing all this without raising taxes.

Dennis Enright, an expert in these public-private partnerships, testified on March 1 to the Senate Transportation and Homeland Security Committee that CDAs cost 50 percent more than traditional public toll roads. He also stated it’s always better to keep these toll projects in the public sector rather than privatize our highways in these monopolistic 50-year contracts.

The taxpayers will pay billions both on the front end with federally backed bonds and loans and on the back end through tolls for the next 50 years just to accelerate the construction of a 10-mile stretch of highway.

The same company won a deal to build Texas 130, won the development rights to build the first 600 miles of the Trans Texas Corridor, called TTC 35, and is one of two foreign companies bidding to takeover U.S. 281 and Loop 1604 in San Antonio and turn them into tollways.

So what’s the solution? The CDA moratorium.

It’s past time to rein in TxDOT’s push to privatize and toll our public highways in these very controversial deals that amount to horrific public policy. The CDA moratorium bills approved by the Senate and the House would place a two-year moratorium on CDAs, giving the Legislature time to get the details of these contracts right before signing away our public highways for 50 years.

Let’s assume that even though TxDOT’s budget has tripled since 1990 and doubled since Perry took office, and even though TxDOT has $7 billion in bonds available to it, we are still short of cash for highways. A recent Texas Transportation Institute study showed indexing the gas tax to inflation is all that’s needed to meet our future transportation needs without tolls.

Politicians in the House, in particular, need to have the political will to enact the most affordable, most sensible financing solution. All the options we’re faced with are tax increases of one sort or another since tolls are clearly a tax, an aggressive one in the hands of a private company.

However, before adding one dime to TxDOT’s budget, the Legislature must also pass San Antonio Sen. Jeff Wentworth’s bill to stop any further hemorrhaging of the gas tax that’s been going to nontransportation sources. The taxpayers won’t tolerate putting more money into a leaky boat. That’s what got us into this mess in the first place.

Since an ounce of prevention equals a pound of cure, let’s revisit the gas tax to prevent this shady widespread shift to private tolling and be done with it.


Terri Hall is director of Texans Uniting for Reform & Freedom, a nonprofit, grass-roots organization working to educate citizens about tolls and the Trans Texas Corridor.

Creation of Dallas inland port adds to trade corridors

Link to news release here.

Dallas Logistics Hub Grand Opening Set for April 13
Logistics Park to Become North America’s Newest Inland Port Transforming the Region into a Major Hub for Goods Movement in the U.S.

DALLAS–(BUSINESS WIRE)–The Allen Group, a major developer of commercial properties across the United States, will host a grand opening ceremony for the Dallas Logistics Hub on Friday, April 13, 2007, from 10 a.m. to 12 p.m. at the Lancaster Municipal Airport at 730 Ferris Road in Lancaster, Texas.

The Dallas Logistics Hub (the “Hub”) is the largest new logistics park under development in North America, with 6,000 acres master-planned for the development of 60 million square feet of distribution, manufacturing, office and retail uses. The Hub also has the potential to be the first logistics park with two intermodal facilities serviced by the two largest freight carriers in the United States. Union Pacific Railroad currently operates a 360,000 lift per year intermodal terminal adjacent to the Hub, with BNSF Railway Company evaluating a potential site on the western side of the project.

The Hub’s unique intermodal, rail and highway access positions Southern Dallas County as the premier trade hub in the Southwestern United States and will serve as the gateway for the distribution of goods to the major population centers throughout the Central and Eastern United States.

Slated to become one of the biggest economic engines for North Texas, the Dallas Logistics Hub, at full build-out, will create approximately 31,000 direct and 32,000 indirect jobs and increase the tax base for the communities of Dallas, Lancaster, Wilmer and Hutchins by $2.4 billion.

Speakers at the event include:

Deputy Administrator of the U.S. Department of Transportation’s Maritime Administration Julie Nelson,
U.S. Congresswoman Eddie Bernice Johnson,
Texas Secretary of State Roger Williams,
State Representative Helen Giddings,
Dallas County Commissioner Maurine Dickey,
Dallas Mayor Laura Miller,
Lancaster Mayor Joe Tillotson,
Hutchins Mayor Artis Johnson,
Wilmer Mayor Don Hudson,
President of the Greater Dallas Chamber of Commerce Jan Hart Black,
Richard Allen, CEO of The Allen Group and
Edward Romanov, President and COO of The Allen Group

Many international, federal, state and local dignitaries, community and business leaders are expected to attend. Attendees will have access to helicopter tours of the Hub showcasing the most sophisticated intermodal, rail and highway infrastructure in the country.

The Allen Group will also announce construction plans on initial vertical developments at the Dallas Hub during the event. For more information on the Dallas Logistics Hub or the event, please log on to www.dallashub.com.

Dallas Logistics Hub

The Allen Group is developing the Dallas Logistics Hub adjacent to Union Pacific’s Southern Dallas Intermodal Terminal, a potential BNSF intermodal facility, four major highway connectors (I-20, I-45, I-35 Loop 9/Trans-Texas Corridor) and Lancaster Airport, which is in the master-planning stage to facilitate air-cargo distribution. The Dallas Logistics Hub is a key component of the NAFTA infrastructure and will serve as a major “inland port” bringing products from the Ports of L.A./Long Beach and Houston, as well as the western deep water ports in Mexico for regional and national distribution.

The Allen Group

The Allen Group is a commercial development firm specializing in rail-served industrial parks and build-to-suit facilities, including Class A office buildings. The Company currently has 8,000 acres under development across the United States, with commercial properties ranging in size from 35,000 square feet to 1.7 million square feet, as well as four master-planned industrial parks. These projects include the International Trade and Transportation Center (www.ittc.com); MidState99 Distribution Center (www.midstate99.com); the Dallas Logistics Hub (www.dallashub.com), and recently announced, K.C. Logistics Hub near Kansas City.

The Allen Group, based in San Diego with regional offices in Visalia and Bakersfield, Calif., Dallas and Kansas City, is trusted by Fortune 500 companies such as VF Corporation, Cox Communications, FedEx, International Paper Company, Intuit, Kraft Foods and Wal-Mart Stores. For more information about The Allen Group, please visit www.allengroup.com.

News coverage of moratorium passing the House

Link to Dallas Morning News article here. Link to Express-News article here. Link to Houston Chronicle article here.

Toll-road freeze exempts North Texas
Legislature: House backs 2-year moratorium on private deals, but outcry spares 121 plans
Tuesday, April 10, 2007
By JAKE BATSELL / The Dallas Morning News

AUSTIN – The drumbeat to rein in toll roads got a lot louder Tuesday when the House overwhelmingly endorsed a two-year freeze on deals to build private pay roads – except in North Texas.

On a 134-5 vote, House members tentatively approved a measure to halt private toll contracts and create a panel to examine the implications of privatizing state roads.

The lopsided vote – cast by many of the same lawmakers who gave such powers to the Texas Department of Transportation four years ago – showed a determination to reconsider state transportation policy. It also was a swipe at how the Transportation Department has been awarding toll-road contracts.

“This is us tapping the brakes, looking before we leap into contracts that last 50-plus years,” said Rep. Lois Kolkhorst, R-Brenham, who wrote the moratorium measure.

If the bill clears a routine final reading today, it would move to the Senate, where transportation committee members have approved a similar bill.

Although North Texas projects are largely unaffected, Ms. Kolkhorst said the bill would apply to the Trans-Texas Corridor, a mammoth statewide highway that would parallel I-35.

The moratorium was a last-minute addendum to a separate transportation bill that gives Texas counties and regional toll-road agencies more authority over rights of way and access to state highways. That bill passed on a 123-17 vote.

The initial proposal Ms. Kolkhorst offered Tuesday would have applied to the entire state. But after an outcry from North Texas legislators, members agreed to spare all projects that fall within the boundaries of the four-county North Texas Tollway Authority.

Time for a ‘deep breath’

Members of the North Texas delegation argued that a moratorium would cripple efforts to ease the fast-growing region’s traffic congestion and improve its air quality.

“You can’t just put the brakes on all our projects,” said Rep. Vicki Truitt, R-Southlake.

Lawmakers said the two-year hiatus would allow a “deep breath” to address mounting concerns about toll-road deals, including the long length of some contracts, future toll increases, provisions to buy back roads and clauses that place limitations on competing roads.

“We need to make sure we’re not rushing out and getting a payday loan,” Ms. Kolkhorst said.

Criticism of the state’s toll-road policies has been escalating since February, when the Transportation Department announced a 50-year deal with Spanish-based Cintra to build and oversee the Highway 121 project in Collin and Denton counties. That deal includes a $2.1 billion upfront payment that could be spent on other traffic projects in the region.

In a separate hearing Tuesday, embattled Texas transportation commissioners told lawmakers that private toll-road contract deals are a critical tool to revamp Texas’ aging, cash-strapped highway system. It was the commissioners’ first public rebuttal since a crowd of hundreds blasted the state’s toll-road policies at a Capitol hearing last month.

Ric Williamson, chairman of the Texas Transportation Commission, told House transportation committee members that the state’s booming population and dwindling funds for roads demand a creative approach to solve looming traffic problems.

Legislators have been unwilling to raise gas taxes, which typically pay to build and maintain roads. The state’s gas tax has been 20 cents a gallon since 1991. Several bills are pending that would raise the gas tax to better reflect inflation.

Mr. Williamson said the Transportation Department is aiming to relieve congestion statewide by selling private companies the rights to toll new “roads of convenience” – such as the Trans-Texas Corridor and State Highway 121. Those projects also will help pay for improvements to established “roads of necessity” such as I-35E, LBJ Freeway and farm-to-market roads.

“We think the path we’re on is based on common sense,” Mr. Williamson said.

Commissioners and Transportation Department officials said the recent debate over private toll roads has been clouded by “myths” that some of the deals’ provisions harm taxpayers.

For example, Mr. Williamson said, shortening the life of the Highway 121 contract to 30 years from 50 would have lowered Cintra’s $2.1 billion upfront payment, which will be used to fund other much-needed road projects throughout North Texas.

“What we know reasonably is that the area is congested now, the air quality is poor now,” Mr. Williamson said. “The opportunity to make our roads safer is limited. And we don’t have the cash flow to build 121 ourselves.”

First crack at projects

Another provision approved by House members Tuesday gives the North Texas Tollway Authority first dibs on toll-road projects in North Texas. Critics maintain that the Transportation Department favored Cintra in awarding the Highway 121 contract, and lawmakers have asked the tollway authority to consider submitting a belated bid.

Rep. Linda Harper-Brown, R-Irving, peppered commissioners Tuesday with questions about whether the tollway authority was pressured to stay out of the bidding process for Highway 121.

Commissioner Ted Houghton said tollway authority officials passed on Highway 121 years ago, before the state began embracing private toll-road contracts.

Tollway authority directors will meet today to discuss whether to reconsider a bid for the Highway 121 project.