Skip to main content

Study: How to fund Interstate highways in a way truckers and drivers can support

As the US Congress once again struggles to find funding for a long-term highway bill, a new Reason Foundation study details why truckers should embrace the use of tolling to finance the reconstruction and modernisation of aging Interstate highways, describes how all-electronic tolling can solve the industry’s previous privacy and logistical concerns about toll roads and proposes a set of rules to ensure that the tolls paid by truckers and motorists are used only to rebuild and widen the newly tolled Inters
July 24, 2015 Read time: 3 mins

As the US Congress once again struggles to find funding for a long-term highway bill, a new Reason Foundation study details why truckers should embrace the use of tolling to finance the reconstruction and modernisation of  aging Interstate highways, describes how all-electronic tolling can solve the industry’s previous privacy and logistical concerns about toll roads and proposes a set of rules to ensure that the tolls paid by truckers and motorists are used only to rebuild and widen the newly tolled Interstate corridors.

The report outlines federal and state legislation that could eliminate the trucking industry’s previous objections to tolling. Truckers would be guaranteed that: Toll rates for the reconstructed Interstates would be set to cover only the capital and operating costs of the tolled infrastructure; Tolling of existing Interstate routes would not begin until that section of highway had already been reconstructed and re-opened to traffic; Tolls would replace current state gas taxes on Interstates, to avoid double taxation; and toll revenues would only be spent on rebuilding, widening, and maintaining the tolled highways.

“The trucking industry has the most at stake in ensuring a solid future for the Interstate highway system,” said Robert Poole, director of transportation policy at Reason Foundation.  

“But truckers have been wary of toll roads because they fear, rightly so, that any new Interstate tolling will turn those highways into cash cows for states, with that money being diverted to other projects, not to the highways used by trucks. However, with full use of today’s electronic tolling technology, plus strong legal highway user protections, toll-financed Interstate modernisation would be an attractive value proposition for truckers and other highway users.”

Historically, the trucking industry has suggested raising gas and diesel taxes instead of implementing tolls. However, Poole notes that paying for the estimated US$1 trillion cost of reconstructing and widening the aging Interstate system would require far more than the modest fuel tax increases being discussed by Congress (which are, in any event, unlikely to be enacted). Even then, Poole says “the new revenue would very likely be spread across all the myriad programs currently supported by the Highway Trust Fund, diverting most of it away from major highways such as the Interstates. Truckers wouldn’t get good value for their fuel tax increase.”

The study also examines existing tolling technology that would protect proprietary route information and will soon allow trucking companies to receive a single, consolidated bill for all tolls on all toll roads used nationwide each month by a fleet of trucks. This technology would eliminate the problem of needing different transponders and receiving individual bills from each state.

Related Content

  • FIA to campaign for the protection of vulnerable road users
    April 1, 2016
    The publication of the European Commission’s 2015 provisional road safety figures leaves no room for complacency, says the FIA, as they show an increase in fatalities compared to the previous year. Even in 2014, there was only a 0.6 per cent reduction and it had been the first year in a long time without a significant reduction. The announcement confirms stagnation for the second consecutive year, which brings the EU further away from the goal of halving road deaths by 2020. Jacob Bangsgaard, FIA Region
  • South Africa's first multi-lane free-flow tolling top of the line
    February 3, 2012
    Kapsch's Kjell Arnesson talks about the first multi-lane free-flow tolling project in South Africa. In South Africa, installation is ongoing as part of the Gauteng Freeway Improvement Project (GFIP) of the country's first Multi-Lane Free-Flow (MLFF) tolling system.
  • Eight ways Volkswagen can regain their customers’ trust
    October 6, 2015
    In the light of Volkswagen's concession of corporate wrongdoing in circumventing EPA (Environmental Protection Agency) testing in the US, Frost & Sullivan has proposed eight strategies the company can utilise to regain consumer trust, fuel sales volumes and develop sustainable revenue growth opportunities. Frost & Sullivan says developments in clean diesel technology and internal combustion engines (ICE) have been substantially pushed back by years. The immediate impact of this crisis goes beyond Volkswa
  • Tolling systems - interoperability is key
    January 25, 2012
    Is US tolling as fragmented and divided as some would have you believe? And are the technology suppliers so very entrenched? ITS International spoke to the market's leading suppliers. A few years back, the prevalent view was that the North American tolling market was characterised by fragmented, proprietary solutions, each existing in splendid isolation. The reality is that a combination of pragmatism and good old market forces have seen some concerted moves made towards interoperability in many areas.