Toll Revenue Bonds: An Answer to the Funding Dilemma?
How to raise the level of federal funding to meet the projected needs
of the surface transportation program over the next six years is a dilemma
whose solution continues to elude congressional authorizers. Fiscally,
the simplest action would be to boost the gas tax or to index the fuel
tax to inflation, but both moves face determined opposition from the
Administration, from congressional leadership and from the congressional
tax-writing committees. Other funding mechanisms could increase the surface
transportation program by some $40 billion, to an estimated $250 billion
over six years -- meeting the Administration proposal of $247 billion,
but still considerably short of the $375 billion goal set by the House
authorizers, the $311 billion goal set by their Senate counterparts,
or even the $280 million target set by the FY 2004 Congressional Budget
Resolution. There exists, however, another way of increasing revenue
for transportation, an option whose potential is only now beginning to
be recognized. That option is toll revenue bonding. Revenue bonds backed
by tolls collected on newly built facilities could be used to finance
construction of significant new highway capacity. It is not inconceivable
that the sale of such bonds could permit the surface transportation program
to grow to the levels advocated by the congressional transportation leaders.
The Fiscal Year 2004 House Transportation
Appropriations Bill
The Fiscal Year 2004 Transportation Appropriations bill emerged from
the House Appropriations Committee in late July with many of the controversial
provisions proposed by the Transportation Appropriations Subcommittee
eliminated in the full committee mark-up. The Committee reserved its
sharpest comments for a critique of Amtrak. "The only actions that
can change the abysmal situation at Amtrak is to completely change how
Amtrak operates and how intercity passenger rail [service] is managed" the
Committee wrote in its report. Its call for a "fundamental system
change" coincides with the release of the Administration's
long-awaited plan for Amtrak's restructuring, the Passenger Rail
Investment Reform Act of 2003 (see companion Brief, "Reinventing
Amtrak"). The final transportation appropriation levels for FY
2004 will not be known until the Senate comes up with its own bill and
the differences are resolved in a House-Senate conference.
Bus Rapid Transit Comes of Age
More than four years ago we drew our readers' attention to the
concept of Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) ("Bus Rapid Transit -- Can
It Work in the U.S.?" March /April 1999). At that time, the BRT
was little more than a curiosity, best known for its success abroad -- in
Curitiba, Brazil and Ottawa, Canada. Since then, BRT has become a subject
of intense interest among transportation officials throughout the country,
thanks in part to a vigorous endorsement by the Federal Transit Administration.
Today, according to the General Accounting Office, 12 U.S. cities are
in various stages of implementing BRT projects.
The number of potential new starts projects is expanding rapidly. As
of June 2003, there were 17 projects in final design and 39 projects
in preliminary engineering with an estimated cost of $50.18 billion,
and 130 investment planning studies representing a potential investment
of $24 billion (House Appropriations Committee report, FY 2004 Transportation
and Treasury Appropriations Bill, July 24, 2003) Clearly, federal resources
can only fund a tiny fraction of these projects and competition for federal
support will be fierce. By opting for the less costly BRT systems, local
jurisdictions can increase their chances of obtaining federal funds as
well as reduce the local fiscal burden.
Reinventing Amtrak - Commentary
The long awaited Administration proposal to overhaul Amtrak was unveiled
on July 28 to a dissonant chorus of praise and criticism. The Chicago
Tribune called the plan "refreshingly bold" while the Pittsburgh
Post-Gazette blasted it as "a thinly veiled death sentence for
national passenger rail service." The Administration's
plan, which calls upon the states to assume primary responsibility
for intercity rail service, raises a fundamental question that has
seldom been raised during Amtrak's 30-year existence: What constitutes
a "national passenger rail system?" Should such a system
be a continent-wide coast-to-coast network of interconnected long-distance
train routes, as envisioned by many Amtrak supporters? Or should it
rather be a system of regional rail services? In our view, the answer
is self-evident. A coast-to-coast interconnected rail system is neither
justified nor needed. Ours is a vast country and there simply is not
enough demand for long distance rail travel to make a continent-wide
rail network economically feasible. Instead, what is needed is rail
services connecting major population centers in heavily traveled corridors.
When viewed in this light, it becomes clearer why responsibility for
intercity rail services -- like for commuter rail services -- should
properly be vested in regional authorities or state governments, as
recommended by the Bush Administration.
Managing Change in State DOTs
Managing change has become a key preoccupation of state DOT chief executives.
Growing traffic congestion, technological innovation, budgetary constraints,
high personnel turnover and homeland security considerations have
created a new policy environment requiring changes in agency roles,
priorities and organization. How state DOT leadership is responding
to the new challenges is the subject of a new report prepared for
the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials
(AASHTO) by Stephen Lockwood of Parsons Brinckerhoff.