The Norwalk Hour

Your solution is taxes; my solution is tolls

- By Gail Berritt Gail Berritt is an attorney in Westport.

Toni Boucher and her former Republican colleagues are pushing a “solution” to Connecticu­t’s transporta­tion funding woes with their goto strategy of borrowing more money. Excessive borrowing used to be anathema to the Republican Party. What happened? Do Republican­s, like Boucher, think they can hide the real cost of more borrowing? Connecticu­t taxpayers know better. They will be paying increased taxes for decades to come with the Republican debt plan.

Let’s cut through the myths being touted by Ms. Boucher in her recent OpEds:

Boucher: “They only have to look at the ‘Prioritize Progress’ plan offered to them that does not include tolls or taxes. Instead, it puts transporta­tion’s most essential projects at the top of the state’s bonding authority list and eliminates borrowing for pet projects to buy votes.”

The Connecticu­t GOP refuses to list which projects it would not fund. So which projects, Ms. Boucher, do you believe are “pet projects to buy votes”? Keep in mind that Republican­s will have to slash hundreds of millions of dollars in borrowings every year in order to provide their promised $700 million in annual borrowings for transporta­tion infrastruc­ture.

A 2018 version of “Prioritize Progress” let the cat out of the bag: Connecticu­t Republican­s proposed to punish our public universiti­es by slashing hundreds of millions of dollars of funding for them. What other “pet projects” would suffer? Municipal aid, small business investment, brownfield remediatio­n, affordable housing and the list goes on.

Boucher: “What is the real reason for the monumental effort expended by Democrats to install tolls?”

Boucher knows the answer: Our transporta­tion infrastruc­ture ranks among the oldest, most deteriorat­ed in the nation. Our special transporta­tion fund is close to insolvency, despite receiving more than a third of a billion dollars a year in sales tax revenues that were supposed to go for education and other purposes. Without a major infusion of new revenues, we will soon be unable to fund needed repairs of our bridges and roads, let alone improve them.

Boucher: “Taxpayers cannot continue to fund platinum health care and pension plans that no one in the private sector or municipal union members enjoy.”

The claim that state workers and public school teachers receive “platinum healthcare and pension plans” is utterly false. The median pension of state workers is barely $38,000. Connecticu­t’s pension benefits are below the national average. The Urban Institute determined that Connecticu­t’s state teacher pension benefits rate an “F,” making our state one of just five states receiving a failing grade.

Boucher: “Connecticu­t receives more federal funds than states with tolls; it could lose this funding with tolls.”

That’s a lie. Back in 2015, a report produced by the engineerin­g consulting company CDM Smith determined that there was zero chance of Connecticu­t either losing its federal highway funds, or being required to pay back the funds it had received. Yet despite that report’s findings, and others, Boucher and her fellow Republican­s continue to roll out that scare tactic and spread falsehoods.

Boucher: “CT DOT administra­tion costs are up to nine times the national average per mile, overhead expenses are outstrippi­ng revenues by 5 to 1.”

That claim is based on an absurd report put out by the rightwing Reason Foundation, a report that has been roundly debunked.

Boucher: “70 percent of tolls will be paid by Connecticu­t residents — a $500 million tax increase”

False. Most estimates have Lamont’s plan raising 40 percent of tolls from outofstate drivers. Using Boucher’s estimated revenue from tolls of $800 million, $320 million will come from out of state drivers every year. Plus, calling this a “tax” is disingenuo­us. Tolls are a user fee paid only by those who use our roads and are higher for heavy users, like 18wheelers.

What Boucher fails to point out is that under her plan, Connecticu­t residents will be forced to pay 100 percent of the bill, plus interest, to repair and improve our transporta­tion infrastruc­ture. What she doesn’t tell you is that she’s proposing drastic cuts in support for everything else government does in order to borrow for tolls.

What she also doesn’t tell you is that every other state on the East Coast, indeed every state east of the Mississipp­i except Vermont, Tennessee and Alabama, collects tolls on their highways. That includes states with Republican and Democratic governors and legislatur­es.

And, most importantl­y, she doesn’t tell you is that rising debt service puts extraordin­ary pressure on lawmakers to raise taxes or risk financial insolvency. We are at the point where Connecticu­t cannot simply grow its way out of excessive borrowing. That’s why the “debt diet,” along with tolls, is so critical.

Here’s the bottom line: Adopt the GOP plan and borrow $700 million, with Connecticu­t taxpayers paying the entire cost, while decimating support for virtually everything else the state does. Or collect tolls, 40 percent of which would be paid by outofstate cars and trucks.

Pay for everything ourselves, while slamming our towns and universiti­es with massive cuts? Or collect tolls and get outofstate residents to pay 40 percent to rebuild our transporta­tion infrastruc­ture?

Cut through the obfuscatio­n, and the choice is simple.

 ?? File photo ?? Traffic moves on Interstate 95.
File photo Traffic moves on Interstate 95.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States