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Mike Krusee

Latest News on Toll Moratorium!


by: salsal

Wed Apr 11, 2007 at 07:20 AM CDT

This is great news. It is more momentum for the people of Texas, and proof that Krusee and Perry are loosing the war. Of concern, note the last line of the AP article below that shows at least one loophole that still stands: "The moratorium would not affect projects planned by regional mobility authorities."

Not noted in the story below: In this House version North Texas projects are largely unaffected. And remember, this is for toll roads with TxDOT CDA deals only, this doesn't stop freeway tolls or managed lanes (toll lanes) or CDA deals with RMA's. CDAs are are NO BID, Secret, Corporate Welfare contracts.

The Senate passed a defanged version days ago. So now we need final passage of the full version in the Senate. Momentum is momentum.

House proposal would put 2-year moratorium on private toll roads 

 

04/11/2007

By APRIL CASTRO  / Associated Press

 

A two-year moratorium on private toll roads that won preliminary approval in the House on Tuesday would put the brakes on the Trans-Texas Corridor, a superhighway that a private firm received a contract for earlier this year.

The moratorium also would halt seven near-term projects in the state, said Rep. Lois Kolkhorst, the Brenham Republican who added the proposal to a House bill.

"This is us tapping the brakes, looking before we leap ... into contracts that last 50-plus years," Kolkhorst said.

Her proposal would require the state to create a commission to study the effects of private equity toll roads and present findings to the state next year.

Rep. Mike Krussee, R-Round Rock, argued that without private toll roads, the state would need to raise the gas tax to pay for roads.

"However well-intentioned, the moratorium adopted by the House would eliminate an enormous pool of non-tax money to address traffic and transportation needs," said Joe Krier, chairman of Texans for Safe Reliable Transportation. "Fewer transportation dollars mean fewer transportation alternatives, and more traffic gridlock."

The state contracted with Spanish-American consortium Cintra-Zachry to develop and maintain the Trans-Texas Corridor, which is envisioned as a $184 billion 4,000-mile network of toll roads, rail lines and utilities.

The contract spans 50 years.

"This is an issue about how Texas will build roads in the future and about whether profits paid by Texans will stay here in Texas ... or whether profits will be siphoned off to Spain, Wall Street or other areas."

In total, planned private equity toll projects are expected to earn $300 billion in profits for the private firms, Kolkhorst said.

"You never sell a producing well and I think that's what we're doing," she said, adding that those profits could be used in Texas to build more highway capacity.

Gov. Rick Perry, who has long championed the Trans-Texas Corridor, has urged the state to reject a two-year toll road moratorium.

"There are no such things as freeways," he said in a statement last week. "There are taxways and tollways, and for 50 years we have tried taxways that have been underfunded by Austin and Washington and that have left local communities choking on pollution and brimming with congestion."

The moratorium would not affect projects planned by regional mobility authorities.

Discuss :: (0 Comments)

Bad TxDOT Deal Exposed - Freeway Sold For Peanuts!


by: salsal

Tue Mar 13, 2007 at 10:31 AM CDT


Just days ago TxDOT sold a Dallas state highway (SH 121 - intended to be a freeway) to Cintra for 50 years. Most sane people knew selling a public highway to a spanish company was a bad deal, but who would have thought it would be exposed to be an outrageous financial  screw up so quickly?

First, you need to know this important tid-bit: TxDOT would not let the North Texas Tollway Authority bid on the tolling of 121 freeway. But it allowed corporations from other countries bid. Cintra won the deal, to toll a Texas Freeway for 50 years, just days ago.

North Texas Tollway Authority estimates it would have given the state $4.2 billion in the freeway for sale deal. Instead TxDOT cut a deal with Cintra for only $700 million. From the Dallas Morning News today:

"The deal to make State Highway 121 a toll road for $2.8 billion in cash was less than half of what the state could have gotten, according to a very rough estimate unveiled Monday by the North Texas Tollway Authority.

In what everyone acknowledged to be an extremely preliminary analysis, the tollway authority said it could have given the Texas Department of Transportation $2.1 billion up front for the rights to the toll road project in Collin and Denton counties. That is the same figure as the winning bidder, Cintra Concesiones Infraestructuras de Transporte SA.

The difference came in how much money the tollway authority said it could pay over the life of the 50-year toll contract: $4.2 billion vs. Cintra's $700 million offer."

We get screwed by billions of dollars and our roads are being stolen for corporate profits. Our elected officials (Perry, Craddick, Williamson, Krusee and others) have sold us out. When will this madness be stopped?
Discuss :: (0 Comments)

The Toll Road and "Managed Lane" Hollow Promise


by: salsal

Sat Mar 10, 2007 at 00:25 AM CST

In 1992, a well known toller, Robert W. Poole, Jr., of the Reason Foundation, stated:
"Congestion pricing-charging a price to use highways that is high at peak hours and low at off-peak times-holds great potential for easing traffic congestion and reducing auto emissions in Southern California."

Today, reality sets in with $8.50 "value priced" toll lanes during rush hour on SR 91 in Southern California (see actual photo of SR 91 during rush hour above). Note the untolled lanes are a dangerous congested nightmare, and even those who pay, must slow down and join the congestion to exit off the highway.

Did the toll roads, managed lanes or value pricing ease traffic congestion?

So when Sen. Kirk Watson, Rep. Mike Krusee, TxDOT or other tollers try to toll roads we've already paid for.

In an effort to deceive the public, slick politico's like Watson say we need "managed lanes". Managed lanes are a marketing term to sell us toll lanes on roads we've already paid for - without using the "T" word!

These comments are from California citizens who have to live with what the politicians sold them, a promise that tolls, managed lanes and value pricing would reduce traffic congestion:

"These lanes were built w/taxpayer money. Should have never been toll road. We are being held hostage by OC and Caltrans. Why aren't our Riverside County reps standing up for us?"

"They are making almost a million dollars every week, and still cannot do anything to relieve the congestion on the 91. Even the yellow "cones" along the FasTrak lanes are old and often times missing. Where is all the money going?"

""Congestion-pricing" is French for fleecing consumers. Oct.'s plan is about making money, not reducing congestion."

"When the Orange County Transportation Authority announced they were going to purchase the toll lanes, they said that the prices were going to drop not go up. Once again, the government lies to get what they want."

"The obscene amount of tax dollars that are TAKEN from us everyday should be more than enough to create and maintain any of these new roads."

"I THINK THIS IS CRAZY. IT KEEPS GOING UP AND UP AND I WILL NO LONGER BE ABLE TO AFFORD THE EXPRESS LANES. MY HUSBAND RECENTLY PASSED AWAY AND MY INCOME IS CUT IN HALF. NOW WITHOUT HIM, I CAN NO LONGER RIDE THE CARPOOL LANES AND MY TRIP TO WORK AND HOME HAS BECOME VERY LONG AND UNBEARABLE ON SOME DAYS."

"They spent a lot of taxpayer's money...they promised reductions in traffic congestion while staying "revenue neutral". About six months later a study showed a drop in traffic of only 0.06 percent, a paltry amount, as compared to an increase in revenue of a whopping 26.0 percent. This kind of double-speak and corruption will continue as long as we, the people, allow it. THROW THE RASCALS OUT!!!"

"Anyone notice all the people who cut into the lanes after the toll plaza. How dangerous is that?"

"Pricing on the 91 Toll Lanes is INSANE! I understand that sometimes it's just as congested as the non-tollroads during rush (hour), but the raise is just too much. I think the price of $8 is too much."

Discuss :: (0 Comments)

20 Targets for 2008 (Texas House)


by: RBH

Tue Jan 09, 2007 at 10:28 PM CST

(Again great stuff from RBH. - promoted by Karl-Thomas Musselman)

Using the data on the election analysis page (for 2004, I'll update slightly when the 2006 data is posted), here are the 7 Republicans who are in the bluest districts.

Haggerty (HD78), Murphy (HD133), Goolsby (HD102), England (HD106), Harper-Brown (HD105), Latham (HD101), and Branch (HD108).

Haggerty hasn't been challenged by a Democrat since 1998. He was almost unseated in the primary though.

Murphy and Latham are freshmen. Murphy won with 56%. Latham beat an incumbent in the primary and didn't face a Democrat.

Goolsby won with 52%, England won with 49%, Brown won with 55%, and Branch won with 56%.

the other 13 Republicans are under the fold!

There's More... :: (23 Comments, 309 words in story)

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