Skip to main content

IBTTA: use tolls to raise the grade

Sobering report on state of US roads suggests road user charging on horizon, IBTTA says
By Adam Hill March 10, 2021 Read time: 2 mins
Could do better: US engineers have given the country's roads a 'D' grade (© Trong Nguyen | Dreamstime.com)

IBTTA is calling on the US government to use tolling and road user charging to help improve the country's infrastructure.

The tolling organisation says the Biden Administration and US Congress should "allow states to use tolling to rebuild their interstate highways" and "advance a national road user charging system".

The move comes following a damning assessment by the American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE) which marked US roads as a 'D' grade.

Looking at roads, bridges, transit, ports, aviation and - for the first time - stormwater, its overall grade for infrastructure was 'C-', including a 'C' for the nation's bridges.

ASCE’s 2021 Report Card "underscores how critical it is coming out of the pandemic to take this opportunity to no longer delay, but truly invest in our nation’s infrastructure", says IBTTA president Mark Compton.

“We salute ASCE and its members for their continued efforts to sound the alarm about the fragile state of America’s infrastructure."

He adds that the US's 6,400 miles of tolled roads, tunnels and bridges "are among the safest in the world precisely because we invest in regular maintenance and capital improvements". 

Tolling is a "powerful and effective tool", added Compton, who is also CEO of the Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission.

IBTTA says the ASCE findings are "a roadmap to Congress as they take action on a stimulus bill and draft the next transportation reauthorisation legislation". 

However, Sam Graves, senior Republican on the House Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, has warned that Republican party support for infrastructure stimulus comes with conditions.

"First and foremost, a highway bill cannot grow into a multi-trillion dollar catch-all bill, or it will lose Republican support," he insisted.

“Second, a transportation bill needs to be a transportation bill that primarily focuses on fundamental transportation needs, such as roads and bridges."

Graves said: "Republicans won’t support another Green New Deal disguising itself as a transportation bill."

He added that rural infrastructure needs "cannot be left behind, and we cannot continue to allow a growing disparity between resources provided to urban and rural communities, as we saw in the $30 billion transit funding portion of the Majority’s recent Covid-19 package".
 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • US FY 2016 budget invests heavily in ITS, infrastructure
    February 3, 2015
    Announcing President Obama’s US$94.7 billion Fiscal Year 2016 budget for the US Department of Transportation, Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx said, “Our budget proposal lays the foundation for a future where our transportation infrastructure meets the demands of a growing population and an economy that depends on the free flow of freight,” said Secretary Foxx. “This Administration is looking towards the horizon – the future – but to do this we need Congress’ partnership to pass a long-term reauthorisa
  • Virtual ITS European Congress 2020: report
    November 25, 2020
    ITS industry ‘needs to make a move towards each other’, Congress delegates hear
  • New officers for IBTTA in 2023
    January 12, 2023
    Appointees to executive committee of tolling organisation's board serve a one-year term
  • IBTTA: industry must commit to trust and accountability
    August 23, 2018
    Without a commitment to trust and accountability, the modern road tolling industry would not have the bedrock which it requires – and which customers demand, says IBTTA’s Bill Cramer When Tim Stewart, executive director of Colorado’s E-470 Public Highway Authority, settled on ‘trust and accountability’ as the themes for his year as IBTTA president, it was a very deliberate choice. Stewart was looking for language that would help deliver the global tolling industry’s message of service excellence to cust