The Day

Region: State Bond Commission OKs $10 million for toll analysis

Malloy: Next governor needs all available data

- By KEITH M. PHANEUF

The State Bond Commission approved $10 million in financing Wednesday for an analysis of establishi­ng electronic tolling on most Connecticu­t highways.

After a nearly hourlong debate, the 10-member commission voted 6-3, with one abstention, to approve the funding proposed by Gov. Dannel P. Malloy.

“I worry that some in modern-day Connecticu­t are subscribin­g to their own know-nothing philosophy,” said the governor, who said his successor and the 2019 legislatur­e will need all available data about tolls to avert a looming transporta­tion crisis. “They’re choosing to reject new informatio­n, to decide proactivel­y to know less, to limit the scope of their options before even fully understand­ing what those options truly are.”

Without a major infusion of revenue, the transporta­tion program will lack the resources to launch major highway projects planned for the coming years, Malloy said, including repairs to the elevated section of Interstate 84 in Hartford, reconstruc­tion of the “Mixmaster” junction of I-84 and Route 8 in Waterbury and widening of major highways.

The Democratic governor, who is not seeking a third term this fall, charged his Republican critics with trying to stifle a crucial debate in a state election year.

He noted that in recent years the state has approved $11 million to fix a bridge in Derby, the home community of House Minority Leader The-

mis Klarides, and $2.5 million for improvemen­ts to an East Haven trolley museum in the district of Senate Republican Leader Len Fasano.

“That’s a museum celebratin­g our transporta­tion past. You’re telling me we can’t spend a little more to study our transporta­tion future?” Malloy said. “Of course we can.”

Department of Transporta­tion Commission­er James Redeker estimated tolls could raise as much as $1 billion per year, with up to 40 percent coming from out-of-state motorists. Depending on the level of discounts provided to in-state residents, though, the state’s annual take could be closer to $600 million to $800 million. DOT officials also have estimated it would take four to five years to fully implement tolls if they were authorized.

Wednesday’s vote does not do that. It provides funding for a study. Authorizin­g tolls would require an act of the legislatur­e.

Besides the governor, others voting to fund the tolls study included state budget director Ben Barnes, Deputy Department of Administra­tive Services Commission­er Toni M. Fatone, Attorney General George Jepsen, state Sen. John Fonfara, D-Hartford, and state Rep. Jason Rojas, D-East Hartford.

The two Republican­s on the bond commission, Sen. L. Scott Frantz of Greenwich and Rep. Chris Davis of Ellington, joined state Comptrolle­r Kevin P. Lembo in voting in opposition.

Davis and Frantz both noted the General Assembly opted not to authorize a tolls study this year. A bill to do so died on the House of Representa­tives’ calendar when the session ended on May 9.

“It failed pretty miserably, not to anybody’s great surprise,” Frantz said. “There will be a new governor to deal with this situation (next year.) Let’s wait. We don’t need it right now.”

“That’s what we have heard time and time again from the people of Connecticu­t: They don’t see a need or a desire to have a $10 million study,” Davis said.

Republican legislator­s have been unanimous in their opposition to tolls. The GOP has countered that Connecticu­t must better prioritize its transporta­tion program and borrowing in general to free up more dollars for infrastruc­ture improvemen­ts.

“People in Connecticu­t don’t want tolls,” Fasano said after the meeting. “They just don’t want to be pickpocket­ed any more. We don’t need to do a toll study.”

Redeker told the bond commission that a Republican plan to finance transporta­tion work without tolls also would leave Connecticu­t unable to do little more than highway and rail maintenanc­e work.

Lembo was the lone Democrat to vote against financing for the tolls study.

“The State Bond Commission should not act as a replacemen­t for legislativ­e action,” the comptrolle­r said afterward. “While the subject of electronic tolling — and infrastruc­ture funding as a whole — is important to debate and discuss, I do not support financing this study through bonding without legislativ­e directive. These decisions should be left to the next governor and legislatur­e, and so I must vote against it.”

Tolls and election-year politics clash

Lembo was the only constituti­onal officer on the bond commission seeking re-election. And while the comptrolle­r did not raise the campaign as an issue, other Democrats questioned privately whether Malloy had hurt his own party by putting an unpopular issue before the public in an election year.

Democratic gubernator­ial contender Ned Lamont issued a statement before the bond commission meeting even had ended, calling the study “a wasteful way to reinvent the wheel.”

“Given our financial challenges, we need to instead be investing in solutions, not studies,” Lamont said. “We already know our roads are congested, our infrastruc­ture improvemen­ts are underfunde­d, and Connecticu­t residents have paid the bill for far too long.”

Lamont said he would “utilize existing data to determine how much revenue Connecticu­t can generate from tolling the out-ofstate trucks that are damaging our roads at taxpayer expense.”

“Informatio­n is a good thing, and that is the goal of this study,” said Bridgeport Mayor Joe Ganim, who will face Lamont in the Democratic gubernator­ial primary. “Tolls are controvers­ial, but the electronic tolls of today are vastly different from traffic jam-causing toll gates of many years ago. Connecticu­t is the only state on the eastern seaboard not to have some kind of tolls, and we see that our special transporta­tion fund is nearly insolvent, and our roads and bridges are falling apart and are not at the capacity we need. This is unacceptab­le and a drag on our cities and our economy.”

“Tolls are just another tax, and I have signed a no-tax pledge.” said GOP gubernator­ial candidate Bob Stefanowsk­i. “Governor Malloy has blatantly ignored the will of the people. A study that will take months and months to complete is a gross misuse of taxpayer funds.”

Former hedge fund manager David Stemerman of Greenwich, one of five Republican­s running for governor, said the tolls debate “highlights the failed leadership of Dan Malloy and the Democrats who have run the transporta­tion trust fund and our state’s infrastruc­ture into the ground. It’s outrageous that their only answer to failed government leadership is to raise taxes on Connecticu­t commuters who are already over-burdened and fleeing the state in droves.”

Move CT Forward, a coalition of Connecticu­t constructi­on industries and trades involved in transporta­tion projects, has been a frequent ally of Malloy in recent years as the governor has sought more funding for transporta­tion projects.

And while the coalition sent about 100 people to the Legislativ­e Office Building on Wednesday, organizer Don Shubert, president of the Connecticu­t Constructi­on Industry Associatio­n, said the group was rallying for more transporta­tion projects — but had no position on the $10 million tolls study.

Most of $10 million might never be spent

But while the questions of tolls sparked a fierce political debate, administra­tion officials also said most of the $10 million might never be spent on a study.

Both the governor and Redeker estimated it would take roughly nine months to solicit proposals for a transporta­tion consultant, and to make a contract award. That would happen, tentativel­y, in April 2019, roughly three months after Malloy leaves office.

That means the governor’s successor easily could block the study simply by directing DOT not to enter into a contract.

In that event, Malloy said, only a small portion of the $10 million would have been spent to advertise and invite interested consultant­s to bid on the project.

State Treasurer Denise L. Nappier, who serves on the bond commission, abstained from Wednesday’s vote, saying she would have supported funding for a broader study.

“I do ... question whether tolls ought to be considered in isolation when there are a myriad of other financing options” to pay for transporta­tion improvemen­ts, she said. These include fuel tax increases as well as public-private partnershi­ps.

Keith M. Phaneuf is a reporter for The Connecticu­t Mirror (www. ctmirror.org). Copyright 2018 © The Connecticu­t Mirror. kphaneuf@ctmirror.org

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