Skip to main content

ARTBA encouraging new highway funding sources

The American Road & Transportation Builders Association (ARTBA) says that to tackle the funding gap for US highways, a different approach is required.
February 9, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
RSSThe American Road & Transportation Builders Association (ARTBA) says that to tackle the funding gap for US highways, a different approach is required. According to ARTBA, the massive gap between current investment levels and what the 2364 US Department of Transportation says is needed to maintain and improve the highway system cannot be closed without boosting current user fees and expanding the use of innovative financing methods. ARTBA says that fuel taxes at the federal, state, and local levels should continue to serve as the primary funding mechanism for highway and bridge improvement programmes. However ARTBA adds that non-traditional funding mechanisms must also be considered to supplement core federal programmes, including greater use of toll highways and bridges, PPPs and the creation of other financing mechanisms such as infrastructure banks and revolving loan funds. ARTBA supports providing states with toll financing options such as congestion pricing, high occupancy toll lanes and truck only lanes, if the revenue generated is used exclusively for transportation capital improvements. States should be able to use appropriately structured toll systems on existing portions of the Interstate Highway System according to ARTBA. Debt financing is another a viable funding source for long-term capital improvements to complement the core highway and transit programs, ARTBA said. However ARTBA offers a note of caution and says that innovative financing methods should not be used to reduce existing levels of highway user taxes, avoiding necessary increases in highway user fees, or diverting highway user generated revenue to non-highway uses.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Road transport must evolve in line with users’ needs
    April 12, 2012
    At its annual plenary meeting held on 25 May 2010, during the 16th IRF World Meeting in Lisbon, the European Road Federation (ERF) elected a new President in the person of Jacobo Díaz Pineda. Mr. Díaz Pineda has been the Director General of the Spanish Road Association (AEC) since September 2006, and is also President of the Ibero-American Road Institute (IVIA). We took advantage of his presence in Lisbon to ask him a few questions about his new responsibilities:
  • ARTBA concerned over drop in US highway spending
    March 4, 2013
    Despite the 2012 passage of the US federal surface transportation law, known as MAP-21, the real value of highway and bridge contract awards over the last 12 months was down 3% compared the previous 12 month period. This is according to the latest analysis of McGraw-Hill Dodge data by the American Road & Transportation Builders Association (ARTBA). Taking into account changes in wages, materials and inflation, state and local governments awarded US$54.3 billion in real highway and bridge contract awards bet
  • ARTBA: Up to 9,600 jobs at risk if Pennsylvania cuts transport works
    August 1, 2013
    Cutting highway and bridge work in the US state of Pennsylvania by 25% in any given year, and then sustaining it in future years, would cost the state US$1.25 billion in lost economic activity over a five-year period and put as many as 9,600 jobs permanently at risk, according to the American Road & Transportation Builders Association’s (ARTBA) chief economist. Dr. Alison Premo Black’s assessment of the impact of the potential impact of state-wide transport works cuts was part of her testimony to the Pennsy
  • ‘Unanimous’ U.S. Supreme Court backs ARTBA in Clean Water Act case
    April 23, 2012
    All nine U.S. Supreme Court justices have backed the American Road & Transportation Builders Association (ARTBA) and refused to widen the scope of the federal Clean Water Act (CWA). ARTBA, the only transport construction association involved in the case, joined with eight other industry associations in filing a claim, urging the Court to overturn a lower court holding that the entire span of three rivers in Montana was “navigable” because certain remote sections are used for recreational pursuits. For trans