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

  • Key report calls for 20-year transport infrastructure plan
    March 14, 2012
    A key transport industry report has called for a 20-year transport infrastructure plan, while also highlighting the short-term need for more private sector investment.
  • S&P Global Rating: credit stability for toll road operators
    August 14, 2017
    The outlook is generally stable for business conditions and credit quality for toll roads worldwide, according to the latest survey from ratings agency S&P Global.The exception is the US where the overall outlook is “positive”, noted the report S&P Global Ratings' 2017. The 21-page report considers broad economic and industry-specific trends. It looks at economic conditions, demographic trends and geopolitical risks that affect the movement of people and goods. “We expect stable or improving, but still frag
  • Maintenance, repairs and replacements needed for US Bridges
    February 1, 2018
    The US is in desperate need of rebuilding many of its road bridges. This comes from an analysis of official data carried out by the American Road and Transportation Builders Association (ARTBA). According to ARTBA’s analysis of the US Department of Transportation’s just released 2017 National Bridge Inventory database, 54,259 of the nation’s 612,677 bridges are rated structurally deficient. The work is needed as these transport links are vital, with Americans crossing these deficient bridges 174 million
  • Road maintenance crisis hits UK and US, as experts gather in Paris
    January 9, 2015
    The road maintenance crisis in the United Kingdom and the United States is deepening amid estimates that it will take millions of dollars to stop highway infrastructure from crumbling, including falling prey to potholes. A recent report by the BBC in the UK said that at least one municipal council, the city of Leeds, is facing a bill of nearly US$153 million to patch up its potholed roads. In the United States, Senator Bernie Sanders is t