Reforming the Dept. of Transportation in Virginia
The Public-Private Transportation of Virginia
SELC has conducted the first comprehensive analysis of a 1995 law that allows private entities to build transportation projects in the Commonwealth. The report shows that taxpayers are still on the line for many project costs, and the driving public is paying the rest through tolls.
Read the report (pdf; 39 pages)
Further, the law has created a shadow transportation planning process in which private entities come up with projects that are profitable to them but don't necessarily meet the transportation priorities of Virginia. The danger is that our limited transportation dollars could be used on projects that benefit the corporate bottom line but don't relieve traffic congestion or protect our natural resources, including our open space and farmland.
The report identifies a number of other problems with the PPTA statute and projects:
- Proposed projects tend to contribute to sprawl development. Proponents have an interest in promoting rapid growth and greater driving to increase toll collections;
- Traffic and revenue projections have been erroneous or
highly questionable; . Major projects have been advanced before other alternatives have been fully studied; - Competition may be reduced by making it more difficult for smaller contractors to get work and by demands from project proposers that the state limit improvements to other roads.
SELC's analysis shows the law is failing to live up to its promise of attracting private money to fund increasingly expensive projects. Instead, projects proposed under the Public-Private Transportation Act (PPTA) rely almost exclusively on tolls and/or taxpayer dollars. Moreover, PPTA projects often circumvent the normal state transportation planning process, limiting public input and consideration of alternatives, and shifting transportation planning away from the Commonwealth Transportation Board.
The report is particularly timely, given recent budget proposals from Gov. Mark Warner and House of Delegates Speaker William Howell to earmark millions of taxpayer dollars during the 2005 General Assembly to jumpstart public-private transportation projects.
The report was written by Jim Regimbal, a principal with Fiscal Analytics, Ltd. with more than 20 years experience in state policy analysis, including serving on the staff of the Virginia Senate Finance Committee. The report examines the law's purpose, explores critical policy issues it creates, discusses seven projects and proposals in detail, and makes numerous recommendations for reform, including:
- Provide for additional public input;
- Require that proposals be part of normal planning processes;
- Give the Commonwealth Transportation Board greater authority over proposals;
- Require private entities proposing a project to invest a certain amount of capital in a project;
- Require them to pay for independent verification of traffic and cost estimates.
State construction projects proposed under PPTA
| Pocahontas Parkway (Route 895) – Richmond region | Complete |
| Route 288 – Richmond region | Almost complete |
| Route 28 – Northern Virginia | Underway |
| Coalfields Expressway – Southwestern Virginia | Underway |
| Route 199 – Williamsburg | Underway |
| Route 58 – Hillsville to Stuart | Underway |
| I-81 widening – Western Virginia | Under consideration |
| I-495 High Occupancy Toll (HOT) Lanes – Northern Virginia | Under consideration |
| I-95 HOT Lanes – Northern Virginia | Under consideration |
| Third Crossing – Hampton Roads | Under consideration |
| Dulles Rail Extension – Northern Virginia | Under negotiation |
| Western Transportation Corridor – Northern Virginia | Request for information |
| Midtown Tunnel - Portsmouth and Norfolk | Request for information |
| Powhite Parkway Western Extension – Richmond | Returned to proposer |
