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New Hampshire lives on water, by Thomas Burack - SentinelSource.com: Guest

New Hampshire lives on water, by Thomas Burack - SentinelSource.com: Guest: There may be no better way to see how our environment supports a vibrant state economy than to consider our reliance on water. First, tourism …

Monday, March 11, 2013

Transportation Investment Needs

Government Relations Update-Infrastructure Needs 
By Darren Benoit, ASCE-NH Government Relations Chairman

This session of the New Hampshire legislature will be critical for funding our State’s infrastructure. ASCE has long been an advocate for the investment of our nation’s infrastructure. As a minimum, we need to consider the investment needed in order to arrest the deterioration of our transportation resources.

For the benefit of any that missed our December meeting with Transportation Commissioner Chris Clement, the Commissioner provided a fiscally responsible evaluation of state transportation needs. The Commissioner identified four key areas where investment will be needed in order to sustain New Hampshire’s infrastructure from further deterioration and the costs associated with that investment. Key areas included yearly miles of paving, red-list bridge repair, I-93 widening investment, and transportation operation costs.

In order to provide a regular pavement maintenance program for the major state roads approximately 500 miles of road need to be resurfaced each year. This allows an eight to ten year cycle and minimizes the number of roadway miles requiring more expensive rehabilitation or reconstruction. Additional investment to meet the 500 mile threshold is $12 million. For comparison, to bring all poor condition roads to good condition would require an investment of about $615 million.

Each year there are bridges added to the list of red-list bridges. A reasonable goal is to remove the same number of bridges from the list through rehabilitation and reconstruction projects.  Additional investment would also shorten the time it takes for a municipality to fund bridge improvements. Investment needed to match the bridges repaired (removed from the red-list) with the bridges added to the list each year would be about $15 million of additional investment. For comparison, to fix all current state red list bridges would require about $680 million.

The I-93 widening project between the Massachusetts border and the I-293 break in Manchester has been identified by the State Legislature as the top infrastructure investment priority and is one of the keys to the economic vitality of the State. In order to finance the remainder of that project an additional $250 million is needed. This would require about $22 million in additional bonding investment.

In addition, the State maintenance and preservation program will be short $25 million dollars per year beginning on July 1, 2013 due to a reduction in funding previously available through the sale of a portion of I-95 to the Turnpike system. This is a significant cut in Department revenue that could result in a substantial number of layoffs if not rectified.

The total additional revenue needed to meet these four goals is approximately $74 million.

Wednesday, March 6, 2013

HB 617-Road Toll

HB 617 passes the House today 207-163.
 
Former House Speaker O'Brien submitted an amendment to eliminate any increase in the gas tax and instead eliminate the diversion of funds from the Highway Fund to other departments. The vast majority of the diversion is the Department of Safety. They use about 90% of the funds diverted from the Highway Fund. By statute this diversion can not exceed 27%. The amendment was defeated by a vote of 120-251.
 
For background, the House has 420 members including 228 democrats and 192 Republicans. When the amendment was voted there were 371 members voting. When the Gas Tax bill passed there was 370 voting.
 
Of the 207 voting for the bill, only 15 were republicans. Of the 163 voting against the bill, 10 were Democrats.
 
The next stop will be in the House Ways and Means Committee.