Skip to main content

Ending tolling on Texas roads ‘would come at a high price’

Eliminating tolls on state highways throughout Texas would be prohibitively expensive, state legislators who are considering such a plan have learned, says the National Council for Public-Private Partnerships. Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT) undertook research how much it would take to eliminate the highways for which it is responsible. It estimates the price of removing tolls on those highways would be at least US$24.2 billion and would increase over time, TxDOT executive director James Bass
September 12, 2016 Read time: 2 mins
Eliminating tolls on state highways throughout Texas would be prohibitively expensive, state legislators who are considering such a plan have learned, says the National Council for Public-Private Partnerships.

375 Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT) undertook research how much it would take to eliminate the highways for which it is responsible. It estimates the price of removing tolls on those highways would be at least US$24.2 billion and would increase over time, TxDOT executive director James Bass told lawmakers in late August, reported the Houston Chronicle.

The department’s cost estimate is based on the state’s outstanding debt and the additional costs of buying back bonds that were sold by 2016 to build toll roads. The final cost of ending tolls is subject to change, however, based on when the highways are paid off and the amount of additional accrued interest the state owes.

Eliminating tolls on the Grand Parkway alone through a single payment at the beginning of 2017 would cost about US$3.6 billion, roughly US$400 million more than the state paid to develop the project, said Bass.

Despite widespread complaints from motorists about the cost of using the toll roads, traffic on them is increasing rapidly. By the end of the 2016 fiscal year, the state had collected US$54.2 million in tolls, US$19.2 million more than TxDOT had estimated.

Meanwhile, new toll lanes along Texas 249 and a direct connection with the Sam Houston Tollway are said to have improved travel times.

The state could find it difficult to allocate the money to end tolls in any case. Voters recently approved new expenditures of up to US$3 billion for state highway projects but none of it can be spent to build or eliminate toll roads.

Related Content

  • August 18, 2015
    Preparing for unpredictable precipitation
    ITS solutions are helping streamline winter road maintenance for Delaware and Illinois, two states that must deal with dynamic weather and varying snowfall totals. Andrew Bardin Williams reports. Wilmington and Newark (pronounced new-ark) are two vastly different cities that sit on opposite ends of Delaware. Newark is a sleepy university town of roughly 30,000 residents abutting the state’s western border with Maryland and Pennsylvania, and often gets confused with its larger namesake in New Jersey.
  • November 28, 2013
    Major setback for California's high speed train
    The future of the California high speed rail project hangs in the balance as a result of two rulings handed down by Sacramento Superior Court Judge Michael Kenny on 25 November. "The judge's ruling will prevent the [California High-Speed Rail] Authority from spending bond measure funds for construction until the funding plan is brought into compliance," said Michael Brady, co- lead attorney on the case, but because that would require finding at least US$25 billion in extra funds, Brady believes complianc
  • November 1, 2023
    The challenging European road to carbon neutrality and the need for distance-based charging
    Fuel taxes are falling and EVs have the potential to create social equity issues. The answer may lie in expanding the use of technology which has successfully been used for two decades with trucks
  • August 2, 2012
    Impact of US economic stimulus programme on ITS industry
    Pete Goldin reports on the public sector perspective in this second article exploring the impact of the US economic stimulus programme on the domestic ITS industry The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) was enacted in February 2009 to help stimulate the US economy in the face of global recession. Of measures worth a nominal total of $787 billion, the US Department of Transportation (USDOT) received just over $48 billion with which to promote short-term economic recovery and an additional $1.5 bil