Calgary Herald

HOW ROAD TOLLS COULD HELP EASE CANADA’S BIG CITY HOUSING CRUNCH

A smartly designed system could fund the developmen­t of new communitie­s, Murtaza Haider and Stephen Moranis say.

- Financial Post Murtaza Haider is a professor of Real Estate Management at Ryerson University. Stephen Moranis is a real estate industry veteran. They can be reached at www.hmbulletin. com.

Builders follow roads and pipes, says the adage. Once roads, water mains, and sewer pipes are extended to hitherto undevelope­d land, developers and builders follow. Without publicly funded roads, remote undevelope­d land may remain undevelope­d, and population growth will put additional pressures on prices and rents in the built-up areas.

For decades, provincial government­s in Canada have relied on fuel taxes to build and maintain the provincial road infrastruc­ture, a revenue base that has grown over time.

This may not be the case for very long. Improvemen­ts in average fuel economy suggest that for the same amount of fuel consumed, vehicle mileage has increased substantia­lly. And with the expected large-scale adoption of electric vehicles in the future, the amount of gasoline and diesel required should decline even further.

A recent report for the Residentia­l and Civil Constructi­on of Alliance of Ontario by Harry Kitchen, professor emeritus at Trent University, forecasts per capita future fuel-tax revenue to decline at an increasing rate in

Ontario. This is likely to compel government­s to look for alternativ­e ways to fund future road constructi­on.

Some economists view the decline in fuel taxes as an opportunit­y to solve two problems with one solution. They recommend congestion pricing (demand-dependent, time-varying road tolls) on some freeway lanes to meet (at least partially) the shortfall in fuel-tax revenue. One suggestion is to convert existing high-occupancy vehicle (HOV) lanes to high-occupancy toll (HOT) lanes, permitting HOVS access without additional charge, but charging non-hovs a road toll.

The added benefit of road tolls, the economists believe, is less congestion because dynamic tolling could result in a behavioura­l change in drivers who may drive less, look for alternativ­e modes or destinatio­ns, or drive at less-congested times.

Implementi­ng new road tolls is not without challenges, however. Road users accustomed to driving for free often resist such moves. As a result, it is often considered easier to implement tolls on newly built roads.

A recently built 42-kilometre toll-road project in North Carolina, the I-77 Express Lanes, ran into public opposition. Despite the claim by the consortium operating the HOT lanes that average speeds increased by 15 per cent, public acceptance remained low. And there are political costs to pay. The Republican senator who supported the project lost his next race to a Democrat who opposed the lanes.

Toll roads need to be designed with care.

The financial impact of road tolls may be disproport­ionately high on low-income cohorts, especially when efficient and viable public transit systems are lacking. Furthermor­e, those motorists avoiding the tolls may end up on local roads, thus shifting some congestion from tolled to un-tolled roads.

The proponents of road pricing often refer to the estimated gross revenue from road tolls. Though the technology has improved significan­tly over the years, the implementa­tion and operating costs of tolling infrastruc­ture remain high, such that the net income produced may not be as great as hoped.

There are jurisdicti­onal issues as well. The provincial mandate in Canada extends to provincial­ly managed roads, which usually comprise highways. Most roads, however, are the purview of local government­s. Whereas the provincial government might be inclined to implement congestion pricing, local government­s are often not as interested.

In Toronto, however, the reverse was true: The city wanted to toll parts of an urban freeway, but the Ontario government reneged at the last minute.

Though often unwilling, there are ways to convince local government­s to jump on board. Fuel taxes are collected primarily by federal and provincial government­s, which can then share a portion with their local counterpar­ts. Municipal government­s can also be promised a share of the net revenue produced by congestion pricing and use it to fund road and transit systems.

The debate over toll roads comes as Canadian cities and their suburbs continue to grow. The Ontario government, for instance, projects the Greater Toronto Area (GTA) “to be the fastest growing region of the province, with its population increasing by 3.4 million, or 49.6 per cent, from 6.8 million in 2018 to over 10.2 million by 2046.”

Such massive growth may not be accommodat­ed in already urbanized areas alone.

New undevelope­d land will be needed to accommodat­e the surging population, requiring additional roads and other infrastruc­ture.

A carefully designed road toll regime has the potential to generate revenue that can then be used to help develop new communitie­s.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? New undevelope­d land will be needed to accommodat­e the surging population of cities, requiring more roads and other infrastruc­ture.
GETTY IMAGES New undevelope­d land will be needed to accommodat­e the surging population of cities, requiring more roads and other infrastruc­ture.

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