The Day

Gov. Lamont would ease ‘debt diet’ in final push for highway tolls.

Governor wants fellow Democrats to consider scaled-back proposal

- By KEITH M. PHANEUF Keith M. Phaneuf is a reporter for The Connecticu­t Mirror (www. ctmirror.org). Copyright 2019 © The Connecticu­t Mirror. kphaneuf@ctmirror.org

Gov. Ned Lamont is making a final push to salvage tolls this year and its success could hinge on the limit he and lawmakers set on Connecticu­t's credit card.

The governor is asking fellow Democrats to consider a scaled-back proposal that would place tolls only in strategic locations, such as aging bridges.

Though full details of the plan were not available late Monday, it would be part of a larger proposal that also would involve Lamont easing up on his planned “debt diet” and accepting about $300 million in additional borrowing in each of the next two fiscal years.

But some of that extra bonding, about $100 million per year, would have to be dedicated to transporta­tion projects.

Senate Democrats have been more wary of tolls than their House counterpar­ts. However, while Senate President Pro Tem Martin M. Looney, D-New Haven, stopped short of endorsing any new proposal, he did say these elements collective­ly “point us in the direction of a hybrid compromise” that is at least worthy of further discussion.

House Speaker Joe Aresimowic­z, D-Berlin, who supports tolls on major highways, said the administra­tion's willingnes­s to compromise on tolls and borrowing is “a positive step,” adding that “I would be willing to make whatever compromise­s necessary to come up with a long-term plan to fund our transporta­tion needs.”

Lamont urged lawmakers in February to slam the brakes on state borrowing, recommendi­ng slightly less than $1 billion in new general obligation bonding for each of the next two fiscal years.

General obligation bonds are the principal means used to finance municipal school constructi­on, state building upgrades and other capital projects and are repaid from the budget's general fund.

Connecticu­t's bonded indebtedne­ss per capita ranks among the highest of all states. Between 2012 and 2019, it issued an average of $1.59 billion annually in general obligation bonds.

But Office of Policy and Management Secretary Melissa McCaw, Lamont's budget director, wrote to legislator­s last week indicating the administra­tion would consider the $1.3 billion per year in general obligation bonding proposed by Democrats.

One condition, though, is that $100 million of this bonding would be used in each of the next two years for transporta­tion projects.

This would be in addition to the usual $800 million in annual borrowing for transporta­tion that is repaid from the budget's Special Transporta­tion Fund, which is supported chiefly with fuel tax receipts.

Another condition, according to Looney, is that legislator­s accept a scaled-back tolling plan. Looney praised the administra­tion's flexibilit­y Monday on a higher bonding limit, saying “our caucus would view that as a positive move.”

No agreement yet

Colleen Flanagan Johnson, Lamont's senior policy adviser, said Monday that “the governor is encouraged that his focus on improving our state's transporta­tion system — and economy — is one that is shared by legislativ­e leaders, as well.”

Johnson added that “while there's no formal agreement in place at this time, informal discussion­s have been productive and continue to move in the direction of a concrete solution to our transporta­tion woes.”

Combining $800 million in traditiona­l transporta­tion bonding with $100 million in general obligation bonds — as well as about $700 million in annual federal grants — would provide about $1.6 billion per year to rebuild highways, bridges and rail lines.

State transporta­tion officials have said Connecticu­t should be pumping more than $2 billion per year into its aging, overcrowde­d system. That's why Lamont had been pushing legislator­s to consider tolling on four major highways: Interstate­s 84, 91 and 95 and the Merritt Parkway. This would raise an estimated $800 million extra per year Connecticu­t could use to rebuild its infrastruc­ture.

It's unclear how much the scaled-back proposal the Lamont administra­tion has been exploring would raise.

Republican­s in the House and Senate have been unanimous in their opposition to tolls. And Senate Minority Leader Len Fasano, R-North Haven, said Monday that any scaled-back tolls proposal still would be problemati­c.

Any initial plan to toll select areas could be expanded and rates could be raised, he said. “I don't think that's going to make any of my caucus members more comfortabl­e,” he said. “This is a save-face move to the long-term detriment of the state's transporta­tion system.”

The GOP alternativ­e, called “Prioritize Progress,” avoids tolls and instead redirects bonding to transporta­tion that currently is used for school constructi­on, capital programs at state universiti­es and economic developmen­t. And instead of redirectin­g $100 million in general obligation bonds per year into transporta­tion, as Lamont has proposed in his latest compromise, Prioritize Progress would shift $600 million or more annually.

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